- #211
bhobba
Mentor
- 10,824
- 3,690
Buzz Bloom said:If the information in the detector is destroyed before the a state of the changed particle is detected
It will make no difference. If the detector changed state due to the detection (it could hardly not if it detected something), the thing it detected has changed state, and any further detection on that has nothing to do with what happened to the first detector.
This is tied up with what are called filtering type observations.
If your views are from discussions with someone who had advanced understanding may I suggest you start with the basics? The following is a good start:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0465062903/?tag=pfamazon01-20
Buzz Bloom said:What I learned from my friend's TE (and some Zen study) is that any philosophical choice for when the superposed state changes to a discrete state can make a reasonable interpretaion of QM that works until one can find an implied paradox. One can then accept that: The true nature of reality is fundementally paradoxical, or one can choose an alternative for which a paradox has not yet been found.
I don't know too much about Zen. My background is applied math and from that perspective I have learned quite a bit of QM. What I can tell you is, while QM is counter intuitive, and somewhat weird, once you understand it, there is no paradox. Its simply a theory about observations. Schroedinger's Cat, if it didn't have a lot a guff written about it, would be seen as trivial. There is an observation at the particle detector and that's it - everything is classical from that point on.
Thanks
Bill
Last edited: