- #36
The Dagda
- 252
- 0
jtbell said:Such as?
Two slit, Bell's thought experiment. What other interpretation has that?
jtbell said:Such as?
Dmitry67 said:Let me repeat.
CI begins from 'wavefunction is not physical, it is just our knowledge about the QM state'.
So we begin from something nonphysical, we indirectly refer to our consciousness ("our knowledge") so poor people start asking silly questions like "did wavefunction ever collapsed before the first human was born?" etc
Talking about tiny particles it begins from 'measurements', 'knowledge' and other attributes of the billion-particle systems.
For that reason CI ruins any hope to solve 6th Hilberts problem ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilbert's_problems ) creating the infinite loop, bad recursion, defining the properties of particles based on the properties of the huge particle systems.
The Dagda said:Two slit, Bell's thought experiment. What other interpretation has that?
wawenspop said:MWI invoking countless billions of Universes every micro micro micro second seems like the very last theorem we should accept and super determinism the next last after that. They appear to be both the ultimate in cop-outs from confused, desperate minds. Hasn't even David Deutsch dropped MWI now? Sorry MWI fans, pls take your revenge on me.
Dmitry67 said:Lets fly away from our planet. We will cross an infinite sequence of Hubble spaces. Now if you just put them in parralel you call it weird?
Dmitry67 said:It is not what QM says.
It is what CI says :)
No. This is not what QM says [...and I'm telling you that...] You must treat the wave function the way you would treat a classical probability distribution function.
jambaugh said:But look carefully at the CI interpretation. It is not an ontological (re)interpretation in the same sense as pilot waves or many worlds. It sticks to the operational meaning of the wave function which is the same operational meaning in the other interpretations... although they add ontological baggage. That operational interpretation is "what QM says" and it is that the amplitude of the wave function is the square root of the probability distribution of observing the quantum in that location. In short the wave function operationally is what we know about the behavior of the quantum system. No other interpretation denies this point. They only add non-operational claims on top of this.
"What QM says" is what QM predicts in an operational setting...as opposed to what various QM theorists say. And as is already stated QM also denies the possibility of observation of this asserted hidden FTL causation.
Finally let me clarify my statement. QM neither affirms nor denies these various ontological interpretations because QM is silent about ontology. (This is obvious from the fact that distinct ontological interpretations are still consistent with the predictions of QM...QM itself is the invariant amoung these.)
Thus QM does not say FTL causality is going on... a claim required to explain results given an ontological interpretation.
[edit: And likewise QM does not say FTL causality is not going on. ]
Remember that if "QM says ..." then all interpretations consistent with the the predictions of QM must also "say...". If not then one is not invoking QM one is invoking someones interpretation.
This is my point.
jambaugh said:1
it is that the amplitude of the wave function is the square root of the probability distribution of observing the quantum in that location.
2
In short the wave function operationally is what we know about the behavior of the quantum system.
3
No other interpretation denies this point.
The occam's razor argument against CI is:Occam's razor is not applicable to CI and MWI because all things are not equal, if it was then MWI would be discounted on the basis of it having the same argument from a philosophical perspective, that was no different in practice than CI anyway.
The Dagda said:1
CI wins by default
2
not only because it has the two slit
3
but it is because it is the closest to experiment we can get and it has no extra baggage that is discounted by Bell's.
4
Occam's razor is not applicable to CI and MWI because all things are not equal, if it was then MWI would be discounted on the basis of it having the same argument from a philosophical perspective, that was no different in practice than CI anyway.
The Dagda said:Bell's is saying local and hidden variable theories are discounted because QM is random, and non-local as demonstrated.
Dmitry67 said:This baggage is terrible, people are talking about it over and over, 50% of topics here are related to the misunderstanding of QM and 'collapse', 3 generations of physicists preferred other interpretations just not to deal with the 'collapse'
DrChinese said:This is NOT a conclusion of Bell's Theorem. Only theories which posit BOTH Locality AND Hidden Variables are discounted by Bell. If you read the original Bell paper, it is easy to walk away with the clear impression that non-locality must be present. But if you read closer, you will see that is not the formal conclusion.
As a matter of fact, there are a number of other theorems which attempt to show that Hidden Variables cannot work even when non-local influences are allowed. Not everyone accepts those "no-go" theorems, however, as there are some technical limitations on their arguments that allow room for debate.
Hurkyl said:The occam's razor argument against CI is:
1. Quantum mechanics talks about quantum states evolving according to Schrödinger's equation (or similar)
2. CI includes another form of evolution for quantum states (collapse)
3. Collapse, as used in CI, has no observable effect
4. Therefore, CI has unnecessarily multiplied entities, a violation of Occam's razor
As far as I can tell, once you get past the silly arguments, it's just a matter of gauge freedom -- and CI tries to insist that it's choice of gauge fixing is a physical truth. MWI simply studies what happens in a 'frame' where unitary evolution holds good.
DrChinese said:Time Symmetric QM does away with the (time) asymmetry of collapse, that is one of its salient features - the other being that it posits a mechanism that respects locality (although strangely). You might be interested in looking at that more closely given your strong opinion on the subject (I think you mentioned "damnation").
Dmitry67 said:MWI is deteministic from the birds view (when you observe all parralel universes at the same time) but it appears to be random in the frog's view(from the point of view of an observer)
For example, in case of S.Cat
Birds view: deterministic, there are both cats: dead and alive, and 2 experimenters saying "cat is dead/alive! nature is random!"
Frogs view: an experimenter observing one cat (dead or alive, it appears to be random for them)
You are making the mistake (or are you? maybe I'm misreading) of assuming the opposite of what you pretend to assume when considering CI. Quantum actuality keeps on zippin' along regardless of consciousness or intelligence. But the first assumption of QM is that you cannot separate what we know from the act of knowing. That's why the principle objects in QM are Observables and not State variables.Dmitry67 said:2 Do you agree that the CI definition is badly recursive, because it defines the properties of the particles based on "what we know". 'What we know' is quite a high level thing because it requires to be consciouss and intelligent.
Now here you are really missing the point. CI doesn't posit wave-functions exit! They are not "out there" they are in our heads. Again they have the exact same status as a probability... a prediction about what may happen. They are more precise in what they predict but they are none-the-less of the same family as classical probability distributions.If it is not enough, let me ask you a question, had wavefunction ever collapsed in the first 1000 years after Big Bang? :)
Again you keep trying to give wave functions reality even in pretending to adopt my point of view. Of course the universe developed fine without any collapse. Again collapse is a conceptual act and not a physical one (according to the interp. I am positing.) Again MWI only if you either mean Many conceptual worlds existing in our imagination given my interp. or many real worlds given your reification of the wave-function. The psi's we write on paper are not describing physical wave-functions they are the wave functions.If yes, what should be used for 'WE' and 'KNOW' in your claim?
If no, then it appears that the universe had developed fine without any collapse, so we get MWI where there is no collapse :)
As the fundamental christian also claims the bible IS reality. Again how is your belief in many worlds anything but a religious faith?3 in MWI wavefunction IS reality (from the birds view), not knowledge
1 As a sidenote, I was always curious about that interpretation from the popular books. This claim is true... but it is only a part of the truth!
It comes from 2 extremes of HUP: we know position precisely we don't know the momentum, and vice versa.
So if we apply one of these 2 extremes to the wavefunction, we get this interpretation with the square root. But we can apply another side of HUP as well, getting another 'meaning' of a wavefunction.
jambaugh said:So let me ask you one question...
Do you deny that if you don't consider the wave-function a physical object then wave-function collapse is a non-issue?
Dmitry67 said:This is a good question.
In fact, rereading your message carefully I can 'emulate' (partly) your vision so there are less contradictions then I saw before.
In a form you formulated your question - I can not deny that.
However, then I have to ask you several questions (they are closely related):
1. Do you think that it is possible to create an axiom system for QM (or TOE) without back-references to upper-level things like 'what we know', 'our knowledge about' etc? (6th Hilberts problem)
2. Do you believe it is possible to formulate all physical laws in a pure mathematical terms?
3. If we are talking obly about the 'observables', can we define the observables without an observer?
4. How do you describe the evolution of the Universe during first 0.01s (quagma state, too hot for ANY observers or stable measurement systems)
5. Your interpretation of the Wigner's friend experiment.
Thank you in advance.
I don't think we should. Science=empirical epistemology = what we know is what we see.Dmitry67 said:This is a good question.
In fact, rereading your message carefully I can 'emulate' (partly) your vision so there are less contradictions then I saw before.
In a form you formulated your question - I can not deny that.
However, then I have to ask you several questions (they are closely related):
1. Do you think that it is possible to create an axiom system for QM (or TOE) without back-references to upper-level things like 'what we know', 'our knowledge about' etc? (6th Hilberts problem)
No of course not. At some point the mathematical terms must be related to the physical...that by the way is the true interpretation of the theory. How a ket or Hermitian operator relates to an actual experimental device.2. Do you believe it is possible to formulate all physical laws in a pure mathematical terms?
How can we define anything without "we"? Science is what scientists do. This again is what "operationalism" is all about. Trying to excise reference to the epistemological foundation of a scientific theory makes it that much harder to separate the theory from the theology. But choosing this language is not a denial of the actuality independent of the observer. It is a recognition that (again) "what we know" and "what we can say" about that actuality always implies a "we".3. If we are talking obly about the 'observables', can we define the observables without an observer?
Again actuality is independent of the observer. Again you keep reifying the very thing that I'm trying to point out is not the reality. When you do this you are puzzled how it can continue to be real without an observer. Clearly as I posit it isn't real even with an observer.4. How do you describe the evolution of the Universe during first 0.01s (quagma state, too hot for ANY observers or stable measurement systems)
Hmmm... let me look that one up, it's been a while,... Oh well first ask me about Schrodinger's cat. I can't say it any better than the wikipedia article on CI http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copenhagen_interpretation"5. Your interpretation of the Wigner's friend experiment.
Thank you in advance.
The Dagda said:I meant it was a conclusion that resulted from the experiment to be clear. But this of course discounts MWI does it not, because the wavefunction is real and the theory is thus deterministic, thus there are "hidden" variables. That means all things are not equal surely?
WaveJumper said:I have just one question about your favourite MWI -
If a mosquito farted, would it create a whole universe?
vanesch said:The way MWI, with a "real" wavefunction, and "deterministic" evolution, nevertheless gets out of Bell's theorem is simply this: in Bell's theorem, you need unique and definite outcomes at Alice and Bob for each experiment, and in MWI, that's not the case: Alice didn't see "up" or "down" ; there is AN alice which saw "up" and ANOTHER alice which saw "down". And the correlation only happens when A Bob compares his results with AN alice. But at that point, there is no distance anymore between them, and they can influence each other (that is to say, the probability to see a specific "alice and bob pair" can depend as well on the alice as on the bob under consideration).
In Bell's proof, you need a single definite outcome at both sides when they are still spacelike separated.
In other words, Bell assumes the "dice are thrown" at Alice and Bob. In MWI, the dice are never definitely thrown.
vanesch said:You must understand what "universe" means in MWI: it means "essentially orthogonal term in the wavefunction". So "creating a universe" comes down to "splitting a single term into two others".
If you have something like |psi> = blah ... + |moon>|sun>|earth>|filled-mosquito>|ocean>... +...
then the explicit term is "one universe". Now, if your mosquito evolves into:
|filled-mosquito> ===> |farting-mosquito> + |constipated-mosquito>
and we fill this in the original wavefunction:
|psi> = blah ... + |moon>|sun>|earth>(|farting-mosquito> + |constipated-mosquito>)|ocean>... +...
and we work this out, then:
|psi> = blah ... + |moon>|sun>|earth>|farting-mosquito>|ocean> + |moon>|sun>|earth>|constipated-mosquito>|ocean> ... +...
and lo and behold, where we had 1 term, we now have 2 terms, so we "created a universe".
Yes.
colorSpace said:MWI seems to remove the randomness from the collapse, but isn't the collapse still there? In the double-slit experiment, you still register each photon at a specific location on the screen.
There is still the wave/particle duality which results seeing a photon register at a specific location, with the wave-like interference only showing up in the statistical distribution.
So isn't MWI saying that there are many non-random collapses, rather than that there would be no collapse?
The Dagda said:No because all wave functions are actualised in another universe, all you do is select one to measure, which to all appearances is random, all possible and presumably infinite wave functions except the one you measure are resolved in another universe thus random instead of the true random of CI, and thus deterministic not probabilistic, as said the die has already been rolled. This sounds like hidden variables repackaged to me though so I think its ruled out but then who am I to judge?
The Dagda said:Vanesch is God.
Dmitry67 said:colorSpace, check the wiki article. It explains why you detect photon in only one point.