Combine General Relativity with Quantum mechanics (Introduction)
by David Turell , Wednesday, January 09, 2013, 20:54 (4337 days ago)
Still trying with loop quantum gravity. No experimental evidence yet, just a theory like string/membrane theory:- "Neil Turok, director of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Ontario, says that the team still needs "artificial assumptions," which it pushes back from the onset of inflation to an earlier time. Loop quantum gravity "has many interesting ideas," Turok says, "but it is not yet a theory one should take too seriously as making predictions.'"-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=scientists-extend-einsteins-relativity-universes-first-moments&WT.mc_id=SA_DD_20130109-Gotta keep trying, but maybe it is not supposed to work!
Combine General Relativity with Quantum mechanics
by Balance_Maintained , U.S.A., Thursday, January 10, 2013, 17:57 (4336 days ago) @ David Turell
"Standard cosmology, based on Einstein's general theory of relativity, cannot explain the origin of the ripples, because it breaks down at very small scales. During the infinitesimally brief period before the start of inflation, called the Planck era, the entire known universe was stuffed into a region many orders of magnitude smaller than an atom. If pushed that far back, relativity makes nonsensical predictions such as infinite energy densities."- Why is that nonsensical? Just curious. Could God be considered 'infinite energy density'? I would find it terribly ironic if science actually had stumbled on the way to prove God exists and then discarded the notion because it didn't fit with their preferred ideal of a godless universe.
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What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.
Combine General Relativity with Quantum mechanics
by David Turell , Friday, January 11, 2013, 05:31 (4336 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained
If pushed that far back, relativity makes nonsensical predictions such as infinite energy densities." > > > Why is that nonsensical? Just curious. Could God be considered 'infinite energy density'? I would find it terribly ironic if science actually had stumbled on the way to prove God exists and then discarded the notion because it didn't fit with their preferred ideal of a godless universe.-Not nonsense. Feynman made the contribution of crossing out all infinities and called it renormaliziation. It works, but at what price? We are allowed to simply ignore the fact that our theories are half-baked! Quantum mechanisms and general relativity won't mix, just like oil and water, but they make great salad dressings.
Double slit quantum mechanics
by David Turell , Tuesday, January 29, 2013, 15:34 (4317 days ago) @ David Turell
Sending particles 144 Km from one lab to another. Creating locality by erasing:-http://phys.org/news/2013-01-einstein-entanglement-quantum-erasure-deconstructs.html
quantum mechanics and probability
by David Turell , Wednesday, February 06, 2013, 15:36 (4309 days ago) @ David Turell
More confusing than ever or less. Multiple universes or not. More thought:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/02/130205151450.htm
quantum mechanics: electrons
by David Turell , Thursday, March 14, 2013, 14:30 (4273 days ago) @ David Turell
Electrons just like photons, wave and particle. QM works and still just as confusing:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/03/130313214031.htm
quantum mechanics and probability
by David Turell , Wednesday, May 15, 2013, 19:51 (4211 days ago) @ David Turell
More confusion. Are waves really present or in our mathematical minds? Look at the comments for a further exploration. The first comment is right on point:-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=can-quantum-beyesnism-fix-paradoxes-quantum-mechanics
Double slit quantum mechanics: fooling time
by David Turell , Tuesday, May 28, 2013, 15:36 (4198 days ago) @ David Turell
Confusing entanglement with particles that never coexisted in time:-http://phys.org/news/2013-05-physics-team-entangles-photons-coexisted.html-But time does exist in the sense of a series of events.
quantum mechanics: fun on Broadway
by David Turell , Friday, May 31, 2013, 23:35 (4195 days ago) @ David Turell
Brian Greene presents quantum mechanics, with help:-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/2013/05/30/spooky-action-on-broadway-a-quantum-drama-by-brian-greene/?WT_mc_id=SA_DD_20130531
quantum mechanics: spookiness proven
by David Turell , Tuesday, June 11, 2013, 15:47 (4184 days ago) @ David Turell
Quantum particle entanglement is finally completely proven:- http://phys.org/news/2013-06-bell-test-loophole-photons.html
quantum mechanics: at another level
by David Turell , Wednesday, June 26, 2013, 21:01 (4169 days ago) @ David Turell
Help to solve the mystery by accepting that quantum events are not in space time as we experience it:-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/critical-opalescence/2013/06/21/can-we-resolve-quantum-paradoxes-by-stepping-out-of-space-and-time-guest-post/?WT_mc_id=SA_WR_20130626
quantum mechanics: at another level
by dhw, Friday, June 28, 2013, 12:31 (4167 days ago) @ David Turell
DAVID: Help to solve the mystery by accepting that quantum events are not in space time as we experience it:-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/critical-opalescence/2013/06/21/can-we-resolve-quan...-I'm way out of my depth here, but I'm trying to understand the arguments, and I hope you (or someone else) will put me right, David. Apologies for the length of the quotes, but they each contain the threads I'm trying to untangle:-In the June issue of Scientific American, physicist and writer Hans Christian von Baeyer describes the current state of "deep confusion about the meaning of quantum theory" and discusses one proposal—a denial that the theory describes anything objectively real—for rendering some of the quantum perplexities "less troubling."-The author writes: "My development of the Transactional Interpretation makes use of an important idea of Werner Heisenberg: "Atoms and the elementary particles themselves ... form a world of potentialities or possibilities rather than things of the facts." This world of potentialities is not contained within space and time; it is a higher-dimensional world whose structure is described by the mathematics of quantum theory. The Transactional Interpretation is best understood by considering both the offer and confirmation as Heisenbergian possibilities—that is, they are only potential events. That removes the possibility of causal-loop inconsistencies, since neither the positive-energy offer wave nor the negative-energy confirmation wave carries real energy, and neither is contained in spacetime. It is only in the encounter between the two that real energy may be conveyed within spacetime from an emitter to an absorber—and when this occurs, all the energy is delivered in the normal future direction."-If I've understood this correctly, it means that quantum mechanics can only take on reality when it is within our own spacetime reality. Otherwise it remains an unreal potential. In that case, isn't it true that the theory does not describe "anything objectively real"? Besides, how can we ever know what is objectively real?-"The transactional picture is conceptually challenging because the underlying processes are so different from what we are used to in our classical world of experience, and we must allow for the startling idea that there is more to reality than what can be contained within spacetime. As is evident from von Baeyer's article, quantum theory truly challenges us to think outside the box—and, in this case, I submit that the box is spacetime itself. If this seems farfetched, consider the eloquent point made by physicist and philosopher Ernan McMullin: "Imaginability must not be made the test for ontology. The realist claim is that the scientist is discovering the structures of the world; it is not required in addition that these structures be imaginable in the categories of the macroworld."-On the surface, this seems to open a scientific gateway to God. But what IS the test for ontology? The fact that something is not imaginable in the categories of the macroworld does not mean that it has any objective reality! The idea that there is more to reality that what can be contained within spacetime seems to be borne out by psychic experiences such as NDEs, but the only way we can test these is through verifiability within spacetime. Doesn't the same apply to all so-called quantum events? Quantum theory described in these terms seems to me to be a licence for people to believe whatever they want to believe. Let me repeat, though, this is a field that leaves me floundering, and so I'd be grateful for any corrections you can make to my interpretation of the above.
quantum mechanics: at another level
by David Turell , Friday, June 28, 2013, 16:01 (4167 days ago) @ dhw
DAVID: Help to solve the mystery by accepting that quantum events are not in space time as we experience it: > > http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/critical-opalescence/2013/06/21/can-we-resolve-quan... > dhw: I'm way out of my depth here, but I'm trying to understand the arguments, and I hope you (or someone else) will put me right, David. Apologies for the length of the quotes, but they each contain the threads I'm trying to untangle: > > In the June issue of Scientific American, physicist and writer Hans Christian von Baeyer describes the current state of "deep confusion about the meaning of quantum theory" and discusses one proposal—a denial that the theory describes anything objectively real—for rendering some of the quantum perplexities "less troubling." > > dhw: The author writes: "My development of the Transactional Interpretation makes use of an important idea of Werner Heisenberg: "Atoms and the elementary particles themselves ... form a world of potentialities or possibilities rather than things of the facts." This world of potentialities is not contained within space and time; it is a higher-dimensional world whose structure is described by the mathematics of quantum theory. The Transactional Interpretation is best understood by considering both the offer and confirmation as Heisenbergian possibilities—that is, they are only potential events. That removes the possibility of causal-loop inconsistencies, since neither the positive-energy offer wave nor the negative-energy confirmation wave carries real energy, and neither is contained in spacetime. It is only in the encounter between the two that real energy may be conveyed within spacetime from an emitter to an absorber—and when this occurs, all the energy is delivered in the normal future direction." > > dhw: If I've understood this correctly, it means that quantum mechanics can only take on reality when it is within our own spacetime reality. Otherwise it remains an unreal potential. In that case, isn't it true that the theory does not describe "anything objectively real"? Besides, how can we ever know what is objectively real?-Our biological capacities allow us to perceive the world as we do, but your point is why some materialists say we do not have free will, as the quantum world underlies our brains and bodies just as it underlies the material world outside our living world. We are left with we can only know what we can observe and what we can feel. When the lady told Stephen Hawking "it is turtles all the way down" she was right on the mark in quantum theory, although she was referring to support of the Earth. Feynman admitted no one understands it. > > dhw: "The transactional picture is conceptually challenging because the underlying processes are so different from what we are used to in our classical world of experience, and we must allow for the startling idea that there is more to reality than what can be contained within spacetime. As is evident from von Baeyer's article, quantum theory truly challenges us to think outside the box—and, in this case, I submit that the box is spacetime itself. If this seems farfetched, consider the eloquent point made by physicist and philosopher Ernan McMullin: "Imaginability must not be made the test for ontology. The realist claim is that the scientist is discovering the structures of the world; it is not required in addition that these structures be imaginable in the categories of the macroworld." > > dhw: On the surface, this seems to open a scientific gateway to God. But what IS the test for ontology? The fact that something is not imaginable in the categories of the macroworld does not mean that it has any objective reality! The idea that there is more to reality that what can be contained within spacetime seems to be borne out by psychic experiences such as NDEs, but the only way we can test these is through verifiability within spacetime. Doesn't the same apply to all so-called quantum events? Quantum theory described in these terms seems to me to be a licence for people to believe whatever they want to believe.-Exactly. Reasonable and hairbrained beliefs abound. Such as, if we were not here to observe the universe it would not exist! Remember, the results we get are the ones we look for. Consciousness always plays a role in the studies. That is why the proposal that the universe is conscious is not unreasonable. > > dhw: Let me repeat, though, this is a field that leaves me floundering, and so I'd be grateful for any corrections you can make to my interpretation of the above.-Your interpretations are as valid as anyone else. Welcome to the world of the quantum.
quantum mechanics: at another level
by dhw, Saturday, June 29, 2013, 08:26 (4167 days ago) @ David Turell
David has referred us to an article on quantum mechanics.-dhw: If I've understood this correctly, it means that quantum mechanics can only take on reality when it is within our own spacetime reality. Otherwise it remains an unreal potential. In that case, isn't it true that the theory does not describe "anything objectively real"? Besides, how can we ever know what is objectively real?-DAVID: Our biological capacities allow us to perceive the world as we do, but your point is why some materialists say we do not have free will, as the quantum world underlies our brains and bodies just as it underlies the material world outside our living world. We are left with we can only know what we can observe and what we can feel. When the lady told Stephen Hawking "it is turtles all the way down" she was right on the mark in quantum theory, although she was referring to support of the Earth. Feynman admitted no one understands it.-I wonder, then, why our author should have bothered with her "Transactional Interpretation" in the first place, since it fails to tell us anything at all about what is and isn't real.-DAVID: Reasonable and hairbrained beliefs abound. Such as, if we were not here to observe the universe it would not exist! Remember, the results we get are the ones we look for. Consciousness always plays a role in the studies. That is why the proposal that the universe is conscious is not unreasonable.-You and I both believe the universe would still exist even if we were not here to study it. And so the proposal that the universe is non-conscious is also not unreasonable.-dhw: Let me repeat, though, this is a field that leaves me floundering, and so I'd be grateful for any corrections you can make to my interpretation of the above.-DAVID: Your interpretations are as valid as anyone else. Welcome to the world of the quantum.-Thank you. I'm reassured and not reassured. I presume that's the way one should express oneself in the quantum world.
Yes, I do offer specifics about TI and reality
by rekastner , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 08:27 (4149 days ago) @ dhw
dhw, if you read my published peer-reviewed work on TI you will see that I address quite specifically these questions of what is real and what kind of reality we're dealing with here. Of course I can't address these issues in detail in an 800-word blog post. That was just an introduction to the basic transactional picture. I can understand general discouragement regarding the failure of many QM interpretations to deal satisfactorily with these questions, but I hope you won't adopt a judgment that this approach must also be a failure without having read the work first. I do offer some very specific proposals about what I think QM tells us about reality.-More info on TI and my development of it, and implications for reality, are on my website and in my book (link for 20% off book on my site).-transactionalinterpretation.org-www.cambridge.org/9780521764155
Yes, I do offer specifics about TI and reality
by dhw, Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 20:01 (4148 days ago) @ rekastner
rekastner: dhw, if you read my published peer-reviewed work on TI you will see that I address quite specifically these questions of what is real and what kind of reality we're dealing with here. Of course I can't address these issues in detail in an 800-word blog post. That was just an introduction to the basic transactional picture. I can understand general discouragement regarding the failure of many QM interpretations to deal satisfactorily with these questions, but I hope you won't adopt a judgment that this approach must also be a failure without having read the work first. I do offer some very specific proposals about what I think QM tells us about reality. -More info on TI and my development of it, and implications for reality, are on my website and in my book (link for 20% off book on my site). -transactionalinterpretation.org www.cambridge.org/9780521764155[/color]-I have only just logged onto this (I live in the UK, and am always miles behind everyone else!). First of all, welcome to the forum, and many thanks for tackling my layman's questions head on. I see there are various writings and talks one can log onto from your website, and I'll try to read some of these in the next few days. I shall have to ask for patience as regards my reading time and my ignorance. Yours is a field I am particularly ignorant of, but I will ask my questions all the same, as that is the only way to learn! -Perhaps to be getting on with, I could ask you for an explanation of the term "transactions", as in [quantum mechanical entities] "become actualized within the spacetime manifold via transactions". It may be that you explain this in your book, or such terms are obvious to people in your field, but I'm sure I'm not the only person on this forum who needs help! Once again, thank you for joining us.
Yes, I do offer specifics about TI and reality
by rekastner , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 20:18 (4148 days ago) @ dhw
Thanks dhw, if you listen to the introductory talk with accompanying ppt on my site, I believe this will address your question about what 'transactions' are. Also this is explained in my CUP book and also will be explained at a more basic level without math in the popular book I'm writing now (hopefully available in 2014).-Here are the links for the talk and ppt:-http://rekastner.files.wordpress.com/2012/12/introduction-to-tiqm-7-19-12.mp3-https://rekastner.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/the-transactional-interpretation.ppt
quantum mechanics: at another level
by rekastner , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 08:13 (4149 days ago) @ dhw
Thanks for your questions about TI. You say:-"If I've understood this correctly, it means that quantum mechanics can only take on reality when it is within our own spacetime reality. Otherwise it remains an unreal potential. In that case, isn't it true that the theory does not describe "anything objectively real"? Besides, how can we ever know what is objectively real?"-Not exactly. Quantum mechanical entities described by the usual quantum states are objectively real physical possibilities, though they don't live in spacetime. However, they can become actualized within the spacetime manifold via transactions -- if that happens, they participate in the exchange of detectable energy and enter the spacetime world of appearance (the empirical world). So the theory does indeed describe something objectively real, it's just that 'real' is not equivalent to 'existing in spacetime'. It may help to remember for example that Plato thought of reality as having 2 levels -- the world of appearance and the underlying reality. In this case, spacetime is the world of appearance, while the quantum possibilities inhabit the underlying reality beyond the world of appearance. Another way to think of this is in terms of Kant's division of reality into (1) the phenomenal realm (spacetime) and (2)noumenal realm (that aspect of reality that is not observable). -The key here is to understand that the physical possibilities described by quantum states are real and they do objectively exist. They just don't exist 'within spacetime' and therefore can't be experienced directly. Remember that Heisenberg spoke of a 'strange new kind of reality somewhere in between an object and the idea of an object' or words to that effect. It is a kind of reality, even though not empirically observable.
quantum mechanics: at another level
by Balance_Maintained , U.S.A., Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 11:52 (4148 days ago) @ rekastner
Rekastner: ... they can become actualized within the spacetime manifold via transactions -- if that happens, they participate in the exchange of detectable energy and enter the spacetime world of appearance (the empirical world). So the theory does indeed describe something objectively real, it's just that 'real' is not equivalent to 'existing in spacetime'. > > The key here is to understand that the physical possibilities described by quantum states are real and they do objectively exist. They just don't exist 'within spacetime' and therefore can't be experienced directly. Remember that Heisenberg spoke of a 'strange new kind of reality somewhere in between an object and the idea of an object' or words to that effect. It is a kind of reality, even though not empirically observable.-As the resident theist, can I just say that this reminds me of what people mean with they call something a 'spirit'.
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What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.
quantum mechanics: at another level
by rekastner , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 19:55 (4148 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained
That's an interesting point. I would note that a quantum possibility is not necessary equivalent to the metaphysical concept of 'spirit', but acknowledging a sub-empirical level of reality opens the door to a consideration of whether QM provides some scientifically grounded gateway into the non-material realm including mental substance and possibly spirit (if that is considered distinct from mental substance, which is of coures another question). I'm currently writing a popular book on my interpretation, which will include a look at these fascinating metaphysical issues.
quantum mechanics: at another level
by David Turell , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 21:00 (4148 days ago) @ rekastner
rekastner: That's an interesting point. I would note that a quantum possibility is not necessary equivalent to the metaphysical concept of 'spirit', but acknowledging a sub-empirical level of reality opens the door to a consideration of whether QM provides some scientifically grounded gateway into the non-material realm including mental substance and possibly spirit (if that is considered distinct from mental substance, which is of coures another question).-Our discussion has been filled with consideration of near-to-death episodes as at a quantum level. Your reply above fits into that area of discussion. The so-called experts feel that consciousness is at a quantum level and the brain acts as a receiver as a major theory.
quantum mechanics: at another level
by David Turell , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 15:07 (4148 days ago) @ rekastner
rekastner: In this case, spacetime is the world of appearance, while the quantum possibilities inhabit the underlying reality beyond the world of appearance. Another way to think of this is in terms of Kant's division of reality into (1) the phenomenal realm (spacetime) and (2)noumenal realm (that aspect of reality that is not observable). > > The key here is to understand that the physical possibilities described by quantum states are real and they do objectively exist. They just don't exist 'within spacetime' and therefore can't be experienced directly. Remember that Heisenberg spoke of a 'strange new kind of reality somewhere in between an object and the idea of an object' or words to that effect. It is a kind of reality, even though not empirically observable.-A wonderful description. I've always thought of two levels, and we can only experience the level we exist in, but can objectively study the other level. Otherwise, why do the formulas work? And Tony's point is right on. God can easily hide in there and be in control.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 15:18 (4148 days ago) @ David Turell
> David:A wonderful description. I've always thought of two levels, and we can only experience the level we exist in, but can objectively study the other level. Otherwise, why do the formulas work? And Tony's point is right on. God can easily hide in there and be in control.-I find Kastner's approach very clarifiying. it is like transactional analysis in psychiatry which I used to great advcantage when I was counselling. Read this blog which I provided earlier:-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/critical-opalescence/2013/06/21/can-we-resolve-quantum-paradoxes-by-stepping-out-of-space-and-time-guest-post/
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 19:39 (4148 days ago) @ David Turell
Thanks very much, David, for your kind words and interest. I do think that the biggest impediment to finding a good interpretation of QM has been the often-unconscious identification of 'real' with 'existing in spacetime'. If one thinks that anything real has to exist in spacetime, then by definition (based on their multi-dimensional mathematical properties and nonlocal behavior) quantum objects can't be real, so they become representations only of our 'knowledge'. I think it's time to get beyond these types of subjectivist, antirealist approaches and to acknowledge there there could be a more subtle kind of reality that is sub-empirical -- and therefore beyond spacetime.-Again I discuss all this in great detail in my book. Some chapters are technical but others are accessible to the layperson, and the chapters on these mataphysical issues don't require a background in math or physics.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by dhw, Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 20:13 (4148 days ago) @ rekastner
rekastner: Thanks very much, David, for your kind words and interest. I do think that the biggest impediment to finding a good interpretation of QM has been the often-unconscious identification of 'real' with 'existing in spacetime'. If one thinks that anything real has to exist in spacetime, then by definition (based on their multi-dimensional mathematical properties and nonlocal behavior) quantum objects can't be real, so they become representations only of our 'knowledge'. I think it's time to get beyond these types of subjectivist, antirealist approaches and to acknowledge there there could be a more subtle kind of reality that is sub-empirical -- and therefore beyond spacetime. Again I discuss all this in great detail in my book. Some chapters are technical but others are accessible to the layperson, and the chapters on these mataphysical issues don't require a background in math or physics.-Ouf, no sooner have I posted a response than I find I'm miles behind again! A perpetual problem for me in this context is the fact that even if there are objective realities outside spacetime, we cannot know what they are. And so when we come to metaphysical concepts, for example, there is still no escaping the "subjectivist" approach. Yes, there has to be an objective truth, but we have no objective access to it!
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 20:28 (4148 days ago) @ dhw
Wait, you have a hidden assumption in your statement "even if there are objective realities outside spacetime, we cannot know what they are."-Your assumption is basically an empiricist approach to knowledge: the doctrine that one can gain knowledge ONLY through sensory perception. But many philosophers, including Plato and Descartes, disagreed with this. Rational analysis is a key ingredient of scientific theory and can yield advances in theoretical description not available based only on studying sensory observations.-So we can't observe these entities directly, but in fact we can gain indirect knowledge of them based on rational analysis of what we can observe. That's what QM is -- it's a theory of objects that cannot be directly observed. Again, I do address these methodological issues in my book, in particular in Chapter 2.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by dhw, Thursday, July 18, 2013, 14:37 (4147 days ago) @ rekastner
Dhw: A perpetual problem for me in this context is the fact that even if there are objective realities outside spacetime, we cannot know what they are. And so when we come to metaphysical concepts, for example, there is still no escaping the "subjectivist" approach. Yes, there has to be an objective truth, but we have no objective access to it!-rekastner: Wait, you have a hidden assumption in your statement "even if there are objective realities outside spacetime, we cannot know what they are." Your assumption is basically an empiricist approach to knowledge: the doctrine that one can gain knowledge ONLY through sensory perception. But many philosophers, including Plato and Descartes, disagreed with this. Rational analysis is a key ingredient of scientific theory and can yield advances in theoretical description not available based only on studying sensory observations. So we can't observe these entities directly, but in fact we can gain indirect knowledge of them based on rational analysis of what we can observe. That's what QM is -- it's a theory of objects that cannot be directly observed. Again, I do address these methodological issues in my book, in particular in Chapter 2.-As usual, we have problems of definition and of levels. The history of epistemology is one long dispute over the criteria for what might be called knowledge. On an absolute level, we can argue that there is no such thing, and that ends all discussion! On a commonsense level, we might say that: "knowledge is information the truth of which is recognized by general consensus among those aware of it". I "know" the Earth goes round the sun, and most people agree (our definition has to allow for minority groups, but must also allow for error, since the general consensus can change). This is knowledge (= intersubjective.) My friend Mr Smith "knows" that God is good, but there is no general consensus on the existence or the goodness of God, so this is belief (= subjective). David Turell and Richard Dawkins as scientists would both claim that their respective beliefs and disbeliefs are based on rational analysis of what they observe. There is no general consensus here either, so rational analysis is clearly not sufficient to guarantee knowledge. I'd be surprised if you and your fellow physicists were all in agreement on the realities that exist outside spacetime, and in the context of metaphysics there is certainly no general consensus. If, then, we wish to talk of knowledge, we must agree on a definition. Would you accept the one I've given?-To clarify my own position, I am totally against the doctrine that sensory perception is the only access we have to reality (a term I prefer, though it's just as difficult to define as knowledge). Most of the experiences that are precious to me have nothing to do with the senses ... love being foremost among them. And although the senses are essential to the experience of music, literature, and art, they are only a channel to a reality that I do not think is sensory at all. Mystics, psychics, NDE patients all experience realities beyond those of sensory perception, and I am not prepared to dismiss their experiences as fantasy. But they are all subjective. I'm told that in your field, "reality" changes with the observer's observation of it. Again, there is no escaping subjectivity, but subjectivity does not necessarily mean unreality! -Now for a special request. Thank you for the various references. I shall try to follow them up as well as order your book, but there's a problem. Time has to be set aside for all these things, and I already have difficulty keeping up with the posts on this forum! I suspect David never sleeps, as he seems to keep up with everything, but I'm a dozy old soul, my days are full, and my nights are long! It would therefore be enormously helpful if we could deal with points as they arise rather than be given a reading list. "Transaction" is obviously a key term for you, and therefore a key term for this discussion (if you are willing to continue it). Can you not define it for me, as in the sentence I quoted last time, or give an example? I hope you will realize from the responses you've already received that your posts are causing a stir among us, and I'm certainly not the only one eager to profit from your expertise, so please don't take offence at this request. It's for purely practical purposes!
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Thursday, July 18, 2013, 15:51 (4147 days ago) @ dhw
dhw: I suspect David never sleeps, as he seems to keep up with everything, -I just use the internet as a fabulous library:- "TI provides the following: a straightforward, simple and elegant account of the Born Rule; an observer-free account of collapse; the collapse is Lorentz-invariant since it occurs either atemporally or all along a spatiotemporal four-vector (depending on one's ontological interpretation); a realist ontology in terms of possibilist realism, thus providing a clear answer to "where all the computation takes place" in quantum computing. It potentially opens a door to an entirely new and exciting understanding of physical reality worthy of the great empirical successes of quantum theory: namely, that the world around us is seething with unactualized, but nevertheless real and potent, physical possibility."-http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1001/1001.2867.pdf-This is a Kastner paper and although I am not educated to follow all the inferences, it appears to me to open up a whole new world of approach to QM. Beyond the great Feynman!
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Friday, July 19, 2013, 20:05 (4146 days ago) @ David Turell
Thanks David -- glad you are as excited about this possible new avenue of knowledge as I am.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Thursday, July 18, 2013, 22:19 (4147 days ago) @ dhw
Indeed, people have had long debates about knowledge, and these continue. I'm just pointing out, in view of these debates, that one can't assume 'out of the starting gate' that there is no way to gain knowledge about entities beyond spacetime.-Transactions in a nutshell: An emitter emits an offer wave OW (that's the entity described by the usual quantum state). An absorber responds to the OW with a confirmation wave which is an 'advanced' wave characterized by negative energy. (The CW is what is missing in other interpretations of QM.) However, both the OW and the CW carry possible energy, not actual energy. -In general, there are many absorbers for one emitted OW and each responds with a CW corresonding to the capabilities of the absorber. This process sets up a set of possible transactions, which are the interactions of OW and CW between the emitter and each absorber. Only one of these can be actualized, and when that happens, a quantum of real, positive energy is transferred from the emitter to the absorber in a spacetime process.-More details in the audiolecture and ppt on my website.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by dhw, Friday, July 19, 2013, 16:01 (4146 days ago) @ rekastner
rek: Indeed, people have had long debates about knowledge, and these continue. I'm just pointing out, in view of these debates, that one can't assume 'out of the starting gate' that there is no way to gain knowledge about entities beyond spacetime.-It may well be that we're talking at cross purposes here, which is why I've tried to pin down a definition of knowledge. "Gaining knowledge about" an entity = gathering information, and is not the same as knowing the entity. You objected to my statement: "even if there are objective realities outside spacetime, we cannot know what they are." My point is virtually the same as the one Tony (balance_maintained) has articulated so clearly in his post to you: TONY: As is so often the case, we find precisely what we seek based on the preconceived notions of what we want. I am no exception to that rule, even though I do try to take a more balanced approach. (I just happen to be on the more religious side of the pendulum swing at the moment). If you search for God in science, you will find him/her/it everywhere you look. If you search for proof that God does not exist, you will find it everywhere you look. In either case, the most realistic answer is that what you have found is neither proof for nor against anything, but rather your interpretation of the evidence.[My bold]-Of course we can "gain knowledge", as you put it, and we can draw subjective conclusions from that knowledge, but although there has to be an objective reality, we cannot "know" what it is. All we have is a subjective interpretation. This is obvious from the debates that rage about every facet of the issues we deal with on this forum. Thank you for explaining "transactions". I shall probably make a fool of myself now, because I'm out of my depth and cannot speak your language. However, since you are writing a "popular" book for the layman, I'll just hope that my floundering will be of some use to you! You wrote:-"In general, there are many absorbers for one emitted OW and each responds with a CW corresonding to the capabilities of the absorber. This process sets up a set of possible transactions, which are the interactions of OW and CW between the emitter and each absorber. Only one of these can be actualized, and when that happens, a quantum of real, positive energy is transferred from the emitter to the absorber in a spacetime process."-Would it be wrong to compare this to a literary text that has many readers, each of whom has his own interpretation, depending on his "capabilities"? Each interpretation is an individual "actualization". Again I would argue that the "real" meaning can never be known. The author can tell you what he intended (though authors do not always say what they mean to say), but of course with your unobservable objects there is not even anyone to consult.-Following this analogy, I can understand it if you say the potential meanings are within the text, and in that sense are "real". But once we take the line that non-actualized potentials are real, ANY actualization can be viewed as a pointer to other realities. We can argue that although I am the spacetime me, and I live in a spacetime universe, other potential dhws and universes are also real. How can we demonstrate that they are or are not? I'm not arguing that the only reality is spacetime reality, but I'm struggling with the idea that we can ever "know" realities beyond spacetime. We can speculate, and even believe, but although we can gather information, we have no access to the objective truth underlying that information. You have said that QM is a "theory of objects that cannot be observed." As I said earlier, and in conjunction with Tony's comments, it seems to be a licence for people to believe whatever they want to believe. But I may have misunderstood the whole argument, or perhaps your lectures on science and religion will make it clearer. Again I can only plead for patience!
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Friday, July 19, 2013, 19:21 (4146 days ago) @ dhw
dhw; I'm struggling with the idea that we can ever "know" realities beyond spacetime. We can speculate, and even believe, but although we can gather information, we have no access to the objective truth underlying that information. You have said that QM is a "theory of objects that cannot be observed." As I said earlier, and in conjunction with Tony's comments, it seems to be a licence for people to believe whatever they want to believe. -It pays to look at discussions at the quantum level. This paper on the atom opens up the realization that we have only a partial view of 'real' things such as atoms, and they are not entirely real because we have to imagine what they are like. It is not surprising that Alice of wonderland fame is involved-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/2013/07/19/the-story-of-energy-the-physics-of-an-atom-part-1/?WT_mc_id=SA_DD_20130719
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Friday, July 19, 2013, 20:02 (4146 days ago) @ David Turell
Thanks David -- you say-"This paper on the atom opens up the realization that we have only a partial view of 'real' things such as atoms, and they are not entirely real because we have to imagine what they are like. It is not surprising that Alice of wonderland fame is involved"- We have a partial view of atoms, yes, but I argue that that does not make them 'unreal'. The point is that reality can be more than what we can see -- i.e. there are (at least) two levels: -(i) the world of appearance -- what we can see (ii) the underlying reality -- what we can't see, but can use reason, based on level (i), to gain knowledge of its structure. I argue that this is what QM offers us.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Friday, July 19, 2013, 20:06 (4146 days ago) @ rekastner
> Ruth: We have a partial view of atoms, yes, but I argue that that does not make them 'unreal'. The point is that reality can be more than what we can see -- i.e. there are (at least) two levels: > > (i) the world of appearance -- what we can see > > (ii) the underlying reality -- what we can't see, but can use reason, based on level (i), to gain knowledge of its structure. I argue that this is what QM offers us.-An absolutely realistic approach. In your opinion wse we ever fully understand the quantum level?
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Friday, July 19, 2013, 19:54 (4146 days ago) @ dhw
You assert:-""even if there are objective realities outside spacetime, we cannot know what they are."-And, if I understand correctly, you're arguing -- in spite of my point that the question of how knowledge is gained, and whether objective knowledge about reality is possible, is the subject of long and sustained debate -- that you can continue to categorically assert that it's impossible to gain objective knowledge about reality? -My point is simply this: there is no proof or categorical demonstration anywhere that shows that it is not possible to gain objective knowledge about reality (where the latter is not limited to the world of appearance). Of course there are arguments in favor of that view, and it can be very compelling, but that doesn't make it assertable as a truth. One can give evidence/arguments for this claim, but one can also find strong evidence/arguments against it. And certainly there are many people who see what they want to see, but this doesn't demonstate that it's impossible to see what we don't want to see, or to be surprised by what we see because we weren't looking for it. In fact, Heisenberg and Planck are key examples of scientits who firmly believed that the world was as classically conceived and yet who were forced, by the fact that their preferred theories (which are forms of knowledge) failed to describe the evidence, to an alternative very strange theory -- quantum theory.- In fact QM is a prime example of a piece of knowledge that scientists were decidely NOT looking for, but was forced on them by the inner workings of nature.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by Balance_Maintained , U.S.A., Sunday, July 21, 2013, 12:36 (4144 days ago) @ rekastner
Sorry for popping in and out of the conversation, but it has been a busy week. 84+ hour work week and finals to boot!- >Rek: My point is simply this: there is no proof or categorical demonstration anywhere that shows that it is not possible to gain objective knowledge about reality (where the latter is not limited to the world of appearance). Of course there are arguments in favor of that view, and it can be very compelling, but that doesn't make it assertable as a truth. One can give evidence/arguments for this claim, but one can also find strong evidence/arguments against it. > -> In fact QM is a prime example of a piece of knowledge that scientists were decidely NOT looking for, but was forced on them by the inner workings of nature.-Actually, I think this IS demonstrable. First, consider the way our senses and the brain works. Your eye is sensitive enough to detect a single photon, yet you will never see one with your naked eye because your brain can not focus and interpret data to that degree. The same could be true for any of our other senses. What YOU experience is an unconscious interpretation of data. So that rules out objective knowledge from first party experience. -What about objective knowledge from a third party then? First, any instrument will only detect what it is designed to detect, so unless you can build a sensor that can detect everything, it is safe to assume that you will never have a complete and accurate picture of any one event, but rather an observation of an event that was biased before it was ever observed because of the limitations of the designer and the observer. -Further, we understand nothing in a vacuum. What I mean is that no one tidbit of knowledge that we ever gain is completely referenced, but instead builds upon knowledge that we have acquired else where. Even our 'instinctive' understanding is shaped this way, which is why, for some, pain is pleasure or pleasure is pain. ->Rek: > And certainly there are many people who see what they want to see, but this doesn't demonstate that it's impossible to see what we don't want to see, or to be surprised by what we see because we weren't looking for it. In fact, Heisenberg and Planck are key examples of scientits who firmly believed that the world was as classically conceived and yet who were forced, by the fact that their preferred theories (which are forms of knowledge) failed to describe the evidence, to an alternative very strange theory -- quantum theory. > -The requirement is not your personal desires, but rather your personal bias, which is slightly different. A bias may not be intentional, or even based on desire. It could, for example, be from a lack of understanding or from the simple absence of relevant raw data. A classic example was the belief that the world was flat. It was not that the people WANTED to believe it, but rather that they simply lacked the data, as well as the understanding of the data they did possess, to come to any other conclusion. -Knowledge of an objective reality has the pre-requisite of a complete data set. Without the complete data set your knowledge will always be skewed and inaccurate, and there for is not objective because it is biased by your own limitations in understanding. The catch 22 is, you will never know if you have a complete data set unless you already possess a complete data set, or at least some criteria detailing what would constitute a complete data set, which in return requires the prerequisite knowledge of the complete data set. There is know way around it. Objective knowledge is impossible for humans to achieve.
--
What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Sunday, July 21, 2013, 23:03 (4144 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained
edited by unknown, Sunday, July 21, 2013, 23:10
Let me clarify: by 'event', I mean a single actualized transaction. That is always well-defined in terms of a specific emitter and a specific absorber. I'm not using 'event' to refer to large-scale processes made up of myriads of events among different observers. In the latter, each observer will have his/her own set of experiences. But they are always reducible to collections of objectively real transactions, and can be corroborated.-You say:-"Knowledge of an objective reality has the pre-requisite of a complete data set."-I'm not claiming that anyone has complete, exhaustive knowledge of an objective reality, so I don't see why this very strict criterion would apply to my claims.-All I claim is that the structure of QM can reasonably be taken as referring to an objectively real structure in the world that can be said to transcend the spacetime domain, since the mathematical structure of the basic objects in the theory (quantum states) does not fit into a spacetime structure. If you take these objects as real, then that's their objective nature IF the theory is correct. That's why I call this provisionally correct knowledge. QM is very likely to be at least approximately correct, since it is so well-corroborated. -On the other hand, if you think that QM does not describe anything real, then you're going with an anti-realist interpretation: the doctrine that QM is only about subjective knowledge. Perhaps that's your view; I reject this approach to physical theory because I think it fails to explain the success of the theories, especially the fact that pet theories can be found to be wrong and new theories discovered that would not have been arrived at without anomalous evidence from nature (e.g. QM). But ultimately of course no realist can disprove the doctrine that physical theory is not about an independent reality but only about our subjective "knowledge" (meaning the kind of assumptions made about sense data based on previous experience and concepts, a la Kant) -- that theories are only about subjective impressions, biases, and so forth. But there's the 'reflexive' problem in which the subjectivists' own statements, by his own criterion, are mere statements of his own subjective impressions and views -- which deprives them of force. So I think this kind of approach is ultimately self-defeating. If we're going to do science, as a means of finding out about the world, then to assume in advance that no non-subjective knowledge about the world is impossible is to prejudge the issue. -I understand that subjectivism can be compelling. The post-modern world has done a good job of calling into question the idea that science can yield any kind of objective knowledge about the world. But (due to the 'reflexivity' problem) it's a self-defeating position because any statement made by a proponent of such a view is nothing more than a statement of their own subjective views, based on their own subjective impressions, all tied together with logic that is heavily dependent on definitions that are endlessly debatable.-As I said before, of course the phenomena we can observe and measure are intersubjectively created and corroborated based on what we choose to measure and how our experiments are set up. However, the fact that certain wrong theories were discarded (classical physics, flat earth theory) certainly is at least good evidence that unexpected aspects of reality can force changes in putative knowledge. The other point is that the structure of those new theories can point to aspects of reality not previously suspected. To say that a theory may provide a basis to think that there is more to reality than what we can sense with our 5 senses is certainly not a claim of total knowledge of such an objective reality, and does not require a 'complete data set'. -The bottom line: one can adhere to a doctrine that all knowledge is subjective, and I can't disprove that, although I have argued that it can be self-defeating. I can adhere to the view that well-corroborated theories can provide a way to gain knowledge of an objective reality; of course I can't prove that claim, but it can't be disproven either. It is certainly possible that there are objects described by quantum theory and that they can be involved in processes independently of a agent's subjective perceptions - e.g., a photon emitted from the sun and absorbed by a leaf. In fact this was happening millenia before agents with subjective impressions arrived on the scene, and they didn't need those agents for their existence.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Friday, July 19, 2013, 20:11 (4146 days ago) @ dhw
Regarding "But once we take the line that non-actualized potentials are real, ANY actualization can be viewed as a pointer to other realities."- Well this is all constrained by our best scientific theories and how well they work. And it depends what you mean by 'sctualization'. An 'actualization' in PTI is a specific thing -- the product of an actualized transaction. The latter is simply one component of a single reality, not a whole new reality. - The unactualized possibilities in PTI are very specific physical things -- whose existence could be detected (even if indirectly), not mere thoughts or imaginings. So I don't see a 'slippery slope' problem that you seem to be arguing for here.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Friday, July 19, 2013, 20:58 (4146 days ago) @ rekastner
Ruth: > The unactualized possibilities in PTI are very specific physical things -- whose existence could be detected (even if indirectly), not mere thoughts or imaginings. So I don't see a 'slippery slope' problem that you seem to be arguing for here.-"DHW: As I said earlier, and in conjunction with Tony's comments, it seems to be a licence for people to believe whatever they want to believe."-This was dhw's comment. His background is all literary and the science of quntum mechanics, which I barely understand with my medical background, is well beyond what he can appreciate. He is right. His commnets will be a good guide to your layman's book to come. I'm also looking forward to it as your two layer approach is right on to help with understanding how much we can learn of the 'other side'.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Friday, July 19, 2013, 22:54 (4146 days ago) @ David Turell
I'll just note again that being realist about QM is most certainly not a license for people to believe whatever they wish about reality. We are tightly constrained by the theory, whose predictions are very well corroborated.-Here's an example: some researchers wanted to believe that quantum states describe our knowledge but not the full reality of quantum objects, if that full reality can be characterized by physically real but unknown properties (and other apparently natural assumptions about the relationship of those hidden properties to the quantum state). A new theorem by Pusey, Barrett and Rudolph (PBR) proves that QM is in conflict with that belief. So it has to be discarded.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Friday, July 19, 2013, 23:14 (4146 days ago) @ rekastner
> Ruth: Here's an example: some researchers wanted to believe that quantum states describe our knowledge but not the full reality of quantum objects, if that full reality can be characterized by physically real but unknown properties (and other apparently natural assumptions about the relationship of those hidden properties to the quantum state). A new theorem by Pusey, Barrett and Rudolph (PBR) proves that QM is in conflict with that belief. So it has to be discarded.-You appear to be stating that we can never completely understand quantum mechanics, even if our calculations work so well.
clarification
by rekastner , Saturday, July 20, 2013, 00:01 (4146 days ago) @ David Turell
edited by unknown, Saturday, July 20, 2013, 00:10
No, I'm not saying that and it wouldn't be the implication of the PBR theorem.- The belief that was found incorrect was the idea that quantum systems have classical-like properties that we can never know. This is apparently false. In contrast, quantum systems may have other qualities that are not expressible in classical terms. Which is hardly surprising. Essentially the belief that was falsified was that underneath the quantum state, quantum objects have classical (determinate) sorts of properties, and the q. state is just an approximate kind of statement about those properties.
clarification
by David Turell , Saturday, July 20, 2013, 01:07 (4146 days ago) @ rekastner
Ruth; No, I'm not saying that and it wouldn't be the implication of the PBR theorem. > > The belief that was found incorrect was the idea that quantum systems have classical-like properties that we can never know. This is apparently false. In contrast, quantum systems may have other qualities that are not expressible in classical terms. Which is hardly surprising. Essentially the belief that was falsified was that underneath the quantum state, quantum objects have classical (determinate) sorts of properties, and the q. state is just an approximate kind of statement about those properties.-From my biological background I have always assumed that the border between the two layers is like a semi-permeable membrane and quantum events follow a one-way entry into our layer. Therefore we could never fully know the other side especially with its infintely variable probabilities.
clarification
by rekastner , Sunday, July 21, 2013, 00:25 (4145 days ago) @ David Turell
But evidently, based on the behaviors that we can see (such as transition lines of atoms), we can arrive at a theory whose mathematical structure describes forms that don't fit into the classical spacetime world. So it's reasonable to suppose that QM is at least a theory of the structure of those potentialities, even if we can't observe their material nature -- or even if they don't possess a material nature. -This is what Einstein meant when he talked about the surprising effectiveness of mathematics to describe reality. Apparently Nature is logical at her core, even if we can't directly observe those inner workings. But mathematical reasoning can somehow access it. I discuss this in my book as well.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by dhw, Saturday, July 20, 2013, 12:10 (4145 days ago) @ rekastner
I woke up to find a marvellous exchange between rekastner and David, and I want to express my own delight at the prospect of what for all of us is a possible new avenue or "window into Kant's 'noumenal realm'." (In the light of our own discussion on knowledge, however, I must point out that in The Critique of Pure Reason Kant denied that noumena could be known!) David ... who is too modest to mention that he has already published one brilliant book on Science vs Religion, and has another coming out this autumn ... is right to emphasize that QM is well beyond me, and I have already freely admitted that I am out of my depth. All the same, precisely because I want to learn more, I would like to go on posing my questions. We have, however, to a certain extent been sidetracked by the discussion on knowledge, and I do need to answer you:-rek: You assert: ""even if there are objective realities outside spacetime, we cannot know what they are." And, if I understand correctly, you're arguing -- in spite of my point that the question of how knowledge is gained, and whether objective knowledge about reality is possible, is the subject of long and sustained debate -- that you can continue to categorically assert that it's impossible to gain objective knowledge about reality? -I have specified "objective realities outside spacetime". I firmly believe that on a commonsense level (as opposed to an absolute level) we can gain objective knowledge about spacetime realities. (See below)-rek: My point is simply this: there is no proof or categorical demonstration anywhere that shows that it is not possible to gain objective knowledge about reality (where the latter is not limited to the world of appearance). Of course there are arguments in favor of that view, and it can be very compelling, but that doesn't make it assertable as a truth. One can give evidence/arguments for this claim, but one can also find strong evidence/arguments against it. -And that is why it is essential to agree on a definition of knowledge. I have offered you my own (which was arrived at on this forum after a very long discussion on epistemology): "knowledge is information the truth of which is recognized by general consensus among those aware of it." I did ask if you accepted this, but if you do not, I need to know what you understand by knowledge. However, you are right that "there is no proof or categorical demonstration anywhere that shows that it is not possible to gain objective knowledge about reality (where the latter is not limited to the world of appearance)." Negatives of this nature cannot be proved. Bertrand Russell, whom you quote in one of your lectures (see my sad story below), pointed out that we cannot prove there is not an invisible china teapot orbiting the sun. We need to agree not only on definitions but also on the level at which we debate these issues.-The remainder of your response concerns people who have changed their beliefs, which of course does not mean that their new beliefs are any more objectively verifiable than their old beliefs. And once again there is a difference between us since you refer to theories as "forms of knowledge". They may be interpretations of reality extrapolated from knowledge, but by my definition they are not knowledge.-In your response to the second half of my post, you say you don't see a 'slippery slope' problem. "The unactualized possibilities in PTI are very specific physical things". Perhaps once more we are talking at cross purposes. I chose the multiverse concept (extended to the multi-dhw concept) as an example because this comes into your paper which David referred us to. You do not regard the multiverse as essential to your own theory, but my problem is that quantum theory HAS been used in this way. And just as with Russell's teapot, we cannot prove that the multiverse is not real (ditto the multi-dhw!). Perhaps it IS real, but for a layman like myself such concepts (like the 11 dimensions of string theory) smack as much of fantasy as of science. Perhaps this could be a problem to cover in your new book, and it would be wonderful if our discussions did prove to be helpful to you as well as to us. And now to a sad story: I have to report that last night I set aside an hour to listen to your lectures on appearance and reality, but 8 minutes into the first one, at precisely the moment when you were about to read some pages from Bertrand Russell, you began a duet with yourself, in which the beginning of the lecture coincided with, I presume, the reading. I tried to stop the tape, but even when I logged off the internet, and clicked onto my documents, your voice (solo) continued with the introduction. It is a very nice voice ... but it had to be stopped! In the end, all I could do was switch off the computer. I am notorious for my incompetence with technology, and have a special gift for making mechanical things go wrong, but do please check just in case it was NOT my fault!
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Saturday, July 20, 2013, 19:46 (4145 days ago) @ dhw
edited by unknown, Saturday, July 20, 2013, 19:52
The problem is that requiring agreement on a definition of 'knowledge' will land us in a thicket of quibbling about the definition, which (especially in view of the entire ongoing field of epistemology) is quite likely impenetrable. It depends on issues of meaning and truth that are entire industries in themselves.-You propose a possible definition: "knowledge is information the truth of which is recognized by general consensus among those aware of it" But that's heavily dependent on other terms whose definitions are elusive: 'information'; 'truth' ... and it also contains a social criterion. So it leads to us to a regress in which we must define these terms as well as the social conditions required for 'general consensus' ... and it rules out possible valid knowledge that isn't dependent on a social consensus. Moreover, if you want to demand 'verifiability' of knowledge, you are basically returning to positivism of the mid-20th century, which has been largely discredited.-Rather than start 'top-down' by attempting to define what could well be undefinable, in order to affirm or deny whether knowledge of a certain kind is possible, why don't we adopt a pragmatic approach in which well-corroborated theories can be taken as yielding (at least provisional) knowledge? That's the basic mission and intent of science and its accompanying philosophical analysis and interpretation. Call that a 'leap of faith' if you want to, but in my view, as long as the science or philosophy practitioner is approaching his/her exploration with an open mind, and willing to abandon a given claim if it comes into serious conflict with either evidence or logic, it seems to me the best possible option for seeking knowledge about the world.-Regarding Kant: yes, he asserted that knowledge of noumena is impossible. That's basically because he defined noumena as unknowable. But he also asserted that Euclidean spacetime is an a priori 'category of experience' ... which has been shown to be false. So we need not take everything Kant said as necessarily correct. He also could not provide an account of our alleged interaction with 'noumena' that would result in the phenomena that we can know. In fact the transactional picture provides just such as account, if quantum entities (as offer waves) are elements of the noumenal realm. This is what I deal with in Chapter 7 of my book (this chapter is available on my site).-Concerning the alleged 'multiverse' ... if this is a reference to the Everett interpretation, that's an approach that tries to address the measurement problem by denying that collapse ever occurs. In my view it is just wrong, and I give specific arguments in my book for why I think this is so. So the fact that QM has been 'used that way' doesn't mean that one must grant reality to the putative implications of that particular interpretational approach. I'm not the only one who rejects Everettian approaches. A. Kent has a lengthy paper on how they fail to accomplish what they claim to (ref in my book). -Re the fictional teapot orbiting the sun: there is also absolutely no evidence or logical argument in favor of its existence either. However there is a well-corroborated theory (QM), with accompanying experimental evidence, concerning the entities described by QM. So again I don't think it's valid to suggest that there's a slippery slope problem in taking a very specific, well-corroborated theory (QM) as having real physical referents even if we can't observe them directly.-Re the lecture: I'm sorry you had trouble with this. It sounds like a browser glitch. If you contact me directly via email (rekastner[at]hotmail.com), I can send you the file and you can download it to your computer. Hopefully that will eliminate the looping problem.-Re the voice: Thanks for the compliment. :) I am also a singer, so if you like music, check out my daughter Janet's Maryland Palestrina Choir selection on youtube (I'm a member of the choir): http://www.youtube.com/user/MDPalestrinaChoir
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Saturday, July 20, 2013, 22:04 (4145 days ago) @ rekastner
Ruth: Re the lecture: I'm sorry you had trouble with this. It sounds like a browser glitch. -I was able to listen to the whole lecture, along with the powerpoint and follow the reasoning as to why TI removes the superposition of the poor cat, and the need for an intellect. But it still leaves me with the same question that in studying particles you can only measure what you look for. There is the same indeterminancy, the same requirement for intelligence. -And this comment from your blog explains it: "My development of the Transactional Interpretation makes use of an important idea of Werner Heisenberg: "Atoms and the elementary particles themselves ... form a world of potentialities or possibilities rather than things of the facts." This world of potentialities is not contained within space and time; it is a higher-dimensional world whose structure is described by the mathematics of quantum theory. The Transactional Interpretation is best understood by considering both the offer and confirmation as Heisenbergian possibilities—that is, they are only potential events."-But the requirement for intelligence still exists but now is realized to exist at the level of choosing which potentiality to look at or for. That certainly seems to get rid of the many worlds issue, the need for an intelligence to actuate the universe, and as your blog points out spookiness at a distance is also obviated.-By the way, the iceberg example of the two layers of reality was a marvelous powerpoint slide.- > Re the voice: Thanks for the compliment. :) I am also a singer, so if you like music, check out my daughter Janet's Maryland Palestrina Choir selection on youtube (I'm a member of the choir): http://www.youtube.com/user/MDPalestrinaChoir-The choir voices are beautiful. Unfortunately my singing is Johnny one note
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Sunday, July 21, 2013, 00:13 (4145 days ago) @ David Turell
You say "But the requirement for intelligence still exists but now is realized to exist at the level of choosing which potentiality to look at or for."-There is no requirement for intelligence in PTI in order for events to happen, i.e., to be actualized in spacetime. Events can happen just based on the existence of absorbers. Whenever a photon OW from the sun interacts with an absorber in a leaf, a transaction can occur in which a quantum of energy is subtracted from the sun and added to the leaf. No person or intelligence is necessary for this.-If you want to do measurements at the quantum level, then of course you generate offer waves (e.g. via a laser or unstable atom or whatever) and you provide absorbers for the offer waves. That's the only level at which intelligence enters. Absorbers are doing the work of actualizing events.-Of course, since we decide what we'd like to generate and how we configure the absorbers, that determines what kinds of phenomena will be actualized in our experiments. But you don't need consciousness or intellgence for real events to occur in spacetime. That's where TI resolves the condundrum of 'Schrodinger's Cat' and its corrolary, 'Wigner's friend', in which it seems as though 'consciousness' is necessary to collapse the wave function. That's only the case if you overlook absorption, and absorbers are real physical entities that precipitate collapse.-I should add that while 'absorber' appears as a primitive term in Cramer's original work, I provide a rigorous physical definition of 'absorber', in terms of relativistic quantum theory, in my CUP book. There is nothing vague about what an absorber is, although you need the relativistic level to see what's really going on. Nonrelativistic QM is only a limiting case, and is not the whole story.-Glad you liked the music!
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by dhw, Sunday, July 21, 2013, 16:31 (4144 days ago) @ rekastner
rekastner: The problem is that requiring agreement on a definition of 'knowledge' will land us in a thicket of quibbling about the definition, which (especially in view of the entire ongoing field of epistemology) is quite likely impenetrable. It depends on issues of meaning and truth that are entire industries in themselves.-You propose a possible definition: "knowledge is information the truth of which is recognized by general consensus among those aware of it" But that's heavily dependent on other terms whose definitions are elusive: 'information'; 'truth' ... and it also contains a social criterion. So it leads to us to a regress in which we must define these terms as well as the social conditions required for 'general consensus' ... and it rules out possible valid knowledge that isn't dependent on a social consensus.-Yes, the game can go on indefinitely, which is why we need to agree on a level, absolute or common sense. Since you have challenged my claim that non-spacetime realities cannot be known, we should explain to each other what we mean by "known". If I talk of information being true (illustrated with the example of the Earth going round the sun), I would hope that on a commonsense level you can understand what I mean. There is no social criterion in my definition ... it merely specifies those who are aware of the information, which can range from family matters to the cosmos. "Possible valid knowledge" is not knowledge! It is theory, as in your proposed substitute: "why don't we adopt a pragmatic approach on which well-corroborated theories can be taken as yielding (at least provisional) knowledge." You're using the word "knowledge" as if it had already been defined. Corroborated by whom? What are the criteria for corroboration? A theory remains a theory until it has been accepted by general consensus, and then we call it a fact which people can "know". This is as close to (unachievable) objectivity as we can get ... although my definition still leaves room for abandoning "a given claim if it comes into serious conflict with either evidence or logic". We could take evolution as an example of a theory which cannot be classified as knowledge, since so many people reject it. (I myself believe in common descent and natural selection, but am sceptical about Darwin's random mutations and gradualism.) I can't comment on your own theory, but it's clear from your disagreement with others in your field that there is no consensus. You may well be right, but the question we're discussing is whether there is any objective criterion whereby such theories can become established as a "known" fact by general consensus among those aware of them. I maintain that there is none. In the exchanges between you and David, emphasis lies on potential realities and events, "Heisenbergian possibilities". You say QM "is at least a theory of the structure of those potentialities, even if we can't observe their material nature ... or even if they don't possess a material nature." David is looking for an avenue into a quantum version of his God (hence the emphasis on intelligence), a quantum explanation of NDEs and of other psychic phenomena. This is what interests me too. But I do not see how you will ever be able to claim "knowledge" of such immaterial "noumena" unless there really is a God who explains everything to us, or perhaps an afterlife in which our immaterial selves are able to conduct different tests in different non-spacetime dimensions. Your concept of knowledge seems to me to be virtually indistinguishable from belief, and this too is a slippery slope, as is all too evident from the distortions of both theistic and atheistic presentations of "evidence". You call your proposal a leap of faith. For me a leap of faith is acceptance of the fact that as three-dimensional, spacetime beings we can never "know" the ultimate truth about our origins or the true nature of reality, and yet we continue the quest in the hope of possible insights. That is why I deeply admire people like yourself and David, who go on searching and helping others in the search. It is also the reason why, in my own personal quest, I started this website. An even greater leap of faith is required, of course, if we are to believe any of the theories available to us, ranging from the God theory to that of materialism.-Thank you for your offer to send me the lectures. I will be delighted to accept, and I look forward to listening to the music. Thank you also for your patience with this stubborn layman!-**** This was drafted before I read Tony's (b_m's) post on the subject. He has once more put the case with admirable clarity. Incidentally, it's not often that he and I are on the same side. Thank you, Tony - and commiserations on the 84-hour week!
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Sunday, July 21, 2013, 20:28 (4144 days ago) @ dhw
edited by unknown, Sunday, July 21, 2013, 20:36
But if you're going to say that 'theory is not knowledge,' then we have very little knowledge. In practice, you're going down Descartes' road of doubting any knowledge of which we can't have absolute certainty. That rules out almost everything we normally think we can claim to know. Descartes couldn't even retain a claim of knowledge based on the information from his senses under that standard, because of the 'evil demon' argument. (See the Meditations.) -E.g.: we have Newton's theory of gravitation: a well-corrobated theory. I count it as good provisional knowledge. There's also QM: a well-corroborated theory. I count that as good provisional knowledge as well. All I do is suggest that QM works so well because it refers to something real in the world, at least to the structure of that something. In fact this is what was suggested by Heisenberg, though he didn't follow up on it.-So for purposes of discussion, a useful working definition is that our best, rigorously tested and well-corroborated theories count as providing at least provisionally correct knowledge about the world.-I'll be happy to send you the lectures -- but I'll need an email address for you. Did you send it to me? Have I overlooked it?
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by dhw, Monday, July 22, 2013, 12:09 (4143 days ago) @ rekastner
rek: But if you're going to say that 'theory is not knowledge,' then we have very little knowledge. In practice, you're going down Descartes' road of doubting any knowledge of which we can't have absolute certainty. That rules out almost everything we normally think we can claim to know. Descartes couldn't even retain a claim of knowledge based on the information from his senses under that standard, because of the 'evil demon' argument. (See the Meditations.) -You've missed the distinction I made between levels. On an absolute level, I agree with the above (and with Tony): no objective knowledge. That's why for practical purposes we need a commonsense level, on which we agree that certain information (of whatever kind) comes as close to objective "truth" as we can get. Hence the need for intersubjective consensus. There are vast quantities of information that come under this category. For instance, our technology provides enough corroboration to call the underlying information "knowledge". Within the confines of spacetime "reality" we can corroborate information by tests and by observation, ranging from man-made facts (your name is Ruth) to discoveries about the cosmos. I can't discuss your theory with you (though I hope to eventually!), so I can only ask if you're saying your potential realities outside of spacetime can be similarly corroborated by tests and observation, and are potentially on a par with the Earth going round the sun, or Barack Obama being current President of the US (= information whose "truth" is recognized by general consensus among those aware of it.) Is there no difference in epistemological status between, say, the knowledge that has created the internal combustion engine and the opposing, "well corroborated" (ah, but by whom?) theories that a god created the universe/that matter is the only reality? Do you actually regard both theism and materialism as knowledge, or even provisional knowledge? By what criteria do you believe it's possible to establish one of these, or any theory outside of spacetime, as objectively (commonsense level) "true"? I'm reluctant to attempt a definition of "theory", but for me an essential element would be that it is a set of explanatory ideas whose "truth" has NOT been recognized by general consensus among those aware of it. But I don't know where to draw the borderline here. You mention the theory of gravity, and personally I'd classify that as "knowledge" under my definition, whereas evolution would certainly remain under theory (not knowledge). Perhaps it would be illuminating to know whether you think the status of your own theory is more that of "gravity" than of "evolution".-However, I don't want this discussion to distract us from more important issues! My own interest lies in the implications of your theory for philosophy in its broadest sense ... i.e. encompassing the nature and meaning of existence. What might it tell us about consciousness, about origins, about the energy that underlies all the workings of life and the universe? In this context, it doesn't matter two hoots whether you wish to call it theory or (provisional) knowledge!-****-I emailed you yesterday at rekastner@hotmail.com but will send the email again. Do please let me know if it doesn't get through, and I will try another way.
quantum mechanics: superposition
by David Turell , Monday, July 22, 2013, 15:25 (4143 days ago) @ dhw
A recent experiment claims millions of photons were in superposition. It does not explain whether they all were in superposition or half and half:-http://phys.org/news/2013-07-big-schroedinger-cats-quantum-boundary.html-Cats or kittens?
quantum mechanics: superposition
by rekastner , Saturday, July 27, 2013, 23:15 (4138 days ago) @ David Turell
I looked at the brief summary but not yet at the journal article. However it sounds as though they created a superposition of two quantum states of the EM field, where the two states were of different number of quanta (photons). So for example (using smaller numbers), you can think of one state as a state of 10 quanta and the other as a state of 20, which looks like -1/sqrt 2 [ |10> + |20> ]
quantum mechanics: superposition
by David Turell , Saturday, July 27, 2013, 23:47 (4138 days ago) @ rekastner
Ruth:I looked at the brief summary but not yet at the journal article. However it sounds as though they created a superposition of two quantum states of the EM field, where the two states were of different number of quanta (photons). So for example (using smaller numbers), you can think of one state as a state of 10 quanta and the other as a state of 20, which looks like > > 1/sqrt 2 [ |10> + |20> ]-Welcome back. I don't see that bigger is better. It is like "my Dad is better than your Dad". Does it really prove anything different than we understood before? Why do they bother to do things like this? But referring to your theory I think I can understand it better.
quantum mechanics: superposition
by rekastner , Sunday, July 28, 2013, 00:26 (4138 days ago) @ David Turell
The motivation for the experiment comes from the 'Schrodinger's Cat' paradox. This is the paradox in which people couldn't seem to get the theory to give us predictions that macroscopic events (like cats) are determinate. Instead the theory seemed to give a persistent superposition even at the macroscopic level, which we never see (we always see only one thing or the other, not a quantum superposition). This is because they fail to take absorption and confirmations into account -- it is those which 'collapse' the cat to either 'alive' or 'dead'.- Since most people haven't figured this out yet, they continue to explore the 'mesoscopic' realm to see how far these superpositions really can persist even though they know that ordinary objects are never really in superpositions.- PTI can explain all this. I'm working on a paper now that will predict how hard it is to maintain a 'quantum superposition' of a system depending on its size (i.e. its number of component quanta).
quantum mechanics: superposition
by David Turell , Sunday, July 28, 2013, 01:47 (4138 days ago) @ rekastner
Ruth: The motivation for the experiment comes from the 'Schrodinger's Cat' paradox. .....This is because they fail to take absorption and confirmations into account -- it is those which 'collapse' the cat to either 'alive' or 'dead'.-> > PTI can explain all this. I'm working on a paper now that will predict how hard it is to maintain a 'quantum superposition' of a system depending on its size (i.e. its number of component quanta).-It is a great pleasure to have you give some of your time to us in such a confusing area. I've read many lay books on quantum theory, but yours is the first to bring some sense to it. Two partially separate layers to reality clarifies very confusing ideas, such as entanglement in the Azores at, I think, 110 Km. From Alain Aspect's few meters in his Paris lab to monster distances. As you stated bigger and bigger but not understanding that speed of light being exceeded in our realm is of no matter in the quantum layer, where speed of light is not at issue.
quantum mechanics: superposition
by rekastner , Monday, July 29, 2013, 00:59 (4137 days ago) @ David Turell
I'm very glad that my current book is proving useful to you! A popular version is underway now.-Just to clarify, 'bigger' in this context always means 'number of degrees of freedom' (e.g. number of particles). As you note, distances mean nothing in the quantum realm, so quantum correlations are not affected by distance.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Tuesday, July 23, 2013, 02:09 (4143 days ago) @ dhw
dhw: However, I don't want this discussion to distract us from more important issues! My own interest lies in the implications of your theory for philosophy in its broadest sense ... i.e. encompassing the nature and meaning of existence. What might it tell us about consciousness, about origins, about the energy that underlies all the workings of life and the universe? In this context, it doesn't matter two hoots whether you wish to call it theory or (provisional) knowledge!-I'm glad you backtracked from these endless doscussions of what is knowledge and how do we know what we know. Dr. Kastner has been kind enough to visit with us about her theories. I feel she can be a great resource to clarify the muddy way I present quantum theory. Earlier (2013-07-22, 03:08) I described some of my observations and conclusions from listening to her and reading her work. I hope she will comment. I know she would like us to email her with questions that might help her expand the discussions in her new book. I'm not sure I understand enough to know what questions to ask. But I am sure looking forward to that book.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Tuesday, July 23, 2013, 15:14 (4142 days ago) @ David Turell
This article preview indicates the importance of our current discussion:-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=physicists-debate-whether-world-made-of-particles-fields-or-something-else
quantum mechanics: entanglement & superposition
by David Turell , Saturday, July 27, 2013, 17:53 (4138 days ago) @ David Turell
A more massive result than before:-http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23931-schrodingers-kittens-made-in-the-lab-from-photons.html-I think Ruth Kastner's theory helps understand this.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Monday, July 22, 2013, 03:08 (4144 days ago) @ dhw
dhw: In the exchanges between you and David, emphasis lies on potential realities and events, "Heisenbergian possibilities". You say QM "is at least a theory of the structure of those potentialities, even if we can't observe their material nature ... or even if they don't possess a material nature." David is looking for an avenue into a quantum version of his God (hence the emphasis on intelligence), a quantum explanation of NDEs and of other psychic phenomena. -Since my name has been brought up, let me review what I have learned by studying Dr. Kastner's blog, lectures slide presentation, Chapter 7, and her discussions here. Her slide of an iceberg- like object representing the quantum area of activity beneath 'our reality' surface opens up a fascinating set of ideas. Recognizing the potentialities in quantum space, it makes it quite clear that with the spookiness at a distance, why entanglement in our level can occur in an instant. The speed of light in our realm does not anything to do with the the quantum realm where the sister particles are really entangled. Thus I can now view the two realities as if separated by a semi-permiable as I know in dialysis. We see quanta coming across that boundary, we can choose how to see them, but all of the underlying uncertainties and potentialities are not apparent. Our choice of measurement is not a requirement that consciousness must be present. The universe exists with or without consciousness. It certainly existed before the universe became conscious in us.It gets rid of the multiworld interpretations of QM. It is a marked advance from Heisenberg's uncertaintly principle. -What I am not clear about is why transactional interpretation is required, as long as the back-and-forth relationships between the two realms is constant, and we are living in and with both realms without being overtly conscious of the quantum realm. For example photosythesis has recently been shown to have a quantum ionization process. I think I understand that an offer wave can create an observable particle. I don't see the necessary reason for a conformation wave proposal. Can such a wave be observed? I realize that part of the reasoning, I think, is the rule of conservation of energy, which can neither be made nor destroyed. So if there is one wave there must by its counterpart. But the actual connection to TI escapes me so far. -As for God, I still think He is consciousness in the quantum realm and our consciousness also exists there. How could the material universe invent consciousness unless it already existed from the beginning?
quantum mechanics: questions for the book
by David Turell , Saturday, July 27, 2013, 23:51 (4138 days ago) @ David Turell
This is a repeat of previous entry so Dr. Kastner can see it-> > dhw: In the exchanges between you and David, emphasis lies on potential realities and events, "Heisenbergian possibilities". You say QM "is at least a theory of the structure of those potentialities, even if we can't observe their material nature ... or even if they don't possess a material nature." David is looking for an avenue into a quantum version of his God (hence the emphasis on intelligence), a quantum explanation of NDEs and of other psychic phenomena. > > Since my name has been brought up, let me review what I have learned by studying Dr. Kastner's blog, lectures slide presentation, Chapter 7, and her discussions here. Her slide of an iceberg- like object representing the quantum area of activity beneath 'our reality' surface opens up a fascinating set of ideas. Recognizing the potentialities in quantum space, it makes it quite clear that with the spookiness at a distance, why entanglement in our level can occur in an instant. The speed of light in our realm does not anything to do with the the quantum realm where the sister particles are really entangled. Thus I can now view the two realities as if separated by a semi-permiable as I know in dialysis. We see quanta coming across that boundary, we can choose how to see them, but all of the underlying uncertainties and potentialities are not apparent. Our choice of measurement is not a requirement that consciousness must be present. The universe exists with or without consciousness. It certainly existed before the universe became conscious in us.It gets rid of the multiworld interpretations of QM. It is a marked advance from Heisenberg's uncertaintly principle. > > What I am not clear about is why transactional interpretation is required, as long as the back-and-forth relationships between the two realms is constant, and we are living in and with both realms without being overtly conscious of the quantum realm. For example photosythesis has recently been shown to have a quantum ionization process. I think I understand that an offer wave can create an observable particle. I don't see the necessary reason for a conformation wave proposal. Can such a wave be observed? I realize that part of the reasoning, I think, is the rule of conservation of energy, which can neither be made nor destroyed. So if there is one wave there must by its counterpart. But the actual connection to TI escapes me so far. > > As for God, I still think He is consciousness in the quantum realm and our consciousness also exists there. How could the material universe invent consciousness unless it already existed from the beginning?
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Sunday, July 28, 2013, 00:20 (4138 days ago) @ David Turell
Thanks David, I'll try to address your questions/comments hereT: "... I don't see the necessary reason for a conformation wave proposal. Can such a wave be observed? I realize that part of the reasoning, I think, is the rule of conservation of energy, which can neither be made nor destroyed. So if there is one wave there must by its counterpart. But the actual connection to TI escapes me so far.-... How could the material universe invent consciousness unless it already existed from the beginning?"- An offer wave alone cannot create an observable event -- you need a confirmation in order for real energy to be transmitted from one entity to another, which is how we make observations. Offer waves are essentially only carriers of possible energy. It is the transactional process that enforces energy conservation. If you've heard of 'virtual particles', these (in a rough sense) are unconfirmed offer waves, and they can violate energy conservation.- As to your second question, I agree that consciousness is probably present 'from the beginning', and becomes manifest at the higher levels of organization. I agree that it's very hard (if not impossible) to get consciousness to somehow emerge from purely physical matter that is considered to have no aspect of consciousness.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 20:51 (4148 days ago) @ rekastner
rekastner: I think it's time to get beyond these types of subjectivist, antirealist approaches and to acknowledge there there could be a more subtle kind of reality that is sub-empirical -- and therefore beyond spacetime.-Your concept is very close to the simple one I had. Our total reality is like a layer cake, we live and recognize ours but are aware of and can make some averaging measurements of what we see coming from the other layer.-Which brings me to my pet peeve: Krauss, Smolin, and Stenger to mention some of the nonphilosopher pysicists/ cosmologists try to tell us we can get something from nothing since our spacetime is roiling with potential quantum particles, and we can get this universe from a quantum perturbation collapse. But our spacetime is something and not a true nothing as Ed Feser points out. Your thoughts?
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 22:20 (4148 days ago) @ David Turell
Well, my interpretation views quantum entities ('offer waves') as physically real possibilities, even if they are not contained within spacetime. So in this picture, spacetime phenomena are emergent from that level -- and we're getting 'something empirical' from 'something non-empirical'. So it's not really something from nothing.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by David Turell , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 22:49 (4148 days ago) @ rekastner
rekastner: Well, my interpretation views quantum entities ('offer waves') as physically real possibilities, even if they are not contained within spacetime. So in this picture, spacetime phenomena are emergent from that level -- and we're getting 'something empirical' from 'something non-empirical'. So it's not really something from nothing.-But my issue is where did spacetime come from, or is it always eternal? The universe had a beginning. Did it come from a quantum event? Vilenkin tells us mathematically he cannot 'see' a 'before' in his math.
quantum mechanics: Sci. Am. adds a view
by David Turell , Wednesday, July 17, 2013, 22:51 (4148 days ago) @ David Turell
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Thursday, July 18, 2013, 12:36 (4147 days ago) @ David Turell
See my book, especially Chapter 8. 'Spacetime' comes from the quantum level, via actualized transactions. The quantum level is timeless (since it is beyond space and time). So in a way, eternity is what supports 'spacetime'. - Yes, this is hard to visualize. I offer some models and illustrations in my book that may help.- We like to think of spacetime objects as stronger than 'mere possibility'. But consider an atom: the electrons (indeed all the components) in the atom are 'mere possibility', and yet they are what give the atom its stability and its ability to serve as a building block of matter. Without the 'possibility' (quantum) aspect of electrons, they would crash into the nucleus and there would be no stable matter.- When some stars undergo gravitational collapse, it is the 'mere possibility' of neutron quanta that resists the immense inward pull of all that star-mass. - Quantum possibility is the strongest thing in the world. So if we allow that quantum possibilities can't 'fit into' spacetime and therefore must transcend it (as even Niels Bohr reportedly acknowledged), there is certainly more to the world than mere spacetime.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by Balance_Maintained , U.S.A., Thursday, July 18, 2013, 21:31 (4147 days ago) @ rekastner
Rekastner: ...The quantum level is timeless (since it is beyond space and time). So in a way, eternity is what supports 'spacetime'. ...We like to think of spacetime objects as stronger than 'mere possibility'. But consider an atom: the electrons (indeed all the components) in the atom are 'mere possibility', and yet they are what give the atom its stability and its ability to serve as a building block of matter. Without the 'possibility' (quantum) aspect of electrons, they would crash into the nucleus and there would be no stable matter...Quantum possibility is the strongest thing in the world. So if we allow that quantum possibilities can't 'fit into' spacetime and therefore must transcend it (as even Niels Bohr reportedly acknowledged), there is certainly more to the world than mere spacetime. > -Let me translate this from the theist perspective..-Something outside the boundaries of material space and time, something with endless possibility and potential beyond our comprehension supports, sustains, and creates our known reality of space and time in the material universe. -> Yes, this is hard to visualize. I offer some models and illustrations in my book that may help. > -It is not hard to visualize at all. We just use different terminology. -Isa 40:28 28 ..a God to time indefinite.+ He does not tire out or grow weary.+ There is no searching out of his understanding.+-Psalms 90:2 Before the mountains themselves were born, Or you proceeded to bring forth as with labor pains the earth and the productive land, Even from time indefinite to time indefinite you are God.-While literally it translates to 'unknown time', it could also be translated as 'time unknown', or 'outside of time'. God does not grow weary or tire out, an infinite source of energy. I could also point out that the bible is rife with out teachings about God forming the universe and everything in it, as well as being directly responsible for bestowing the essential energy of life itself. (No, I am not talking about a soul or anything of the sort, I literally mean energy, and it is an energy that is explicitly described as returning to god at the moment of death, but separate from thought/memories/emotion/personality.) Call it the spark of life if you will. -Without the 'laws' or rules placed upon the material world, or "Without the 'possibility' (quantum) aspect of electrons, they would crash into the nucleus and there would be no stable matter".-People have been thinking like this since man first arrived on the seen, it just took a few centuries of denial, a shit ton of arrogance, and a lot of $20 words to make them feel comfortable talking about it in public again.
--
What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by rekastner , Thursday, July 18, 2013, 22:27 (4147 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained
Let me just say that I am very interested in the relationship between science and religion and have taught courses on this. I have 2 audiolectures, prepared for those courses, on my website that deal with these types of issues:-http://rekastner.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/appearance-and-reality-1.wav-http://rekastner.files.wordpress.com/2012/04/appearance_and_reality2a.mp3-In my book, I propose that QM provides a window into Kant's 'noumenal' realm which could certainly be considered a gateway to nonmaterial aspects of the world. So this is indeed a fertile area for philosophical exploration.
quantum mechanics: Kastner\'s brilliant blog
by Balance_Maintained , U.S.A., Thursday, July 18, 2013, 22:39 (4147 days ago) @ rekastner
As is so often the case, we find precisely what we seek based on the preconceived notions of what we want. I am no exception to that rule, even though I do try to take a more balanced approach. (I just happen to be on the more religious side of the pendulum swing at the moment). If you search for God in science, you will find him/her/it everywhere you look. If you search for proof that God does not exist, you will find it everywhere you look. In either case, the most realistic answer is that what you have found is neither proof for nor against anything, but rather your interpretation of the evidence. I have long held that science is as much of a religion as any of the worlds recognized religions, and that both science and religion are simply different aspects of the same search for answers based on different criteria. Personally, I see God's handiwork everywhere I look; from the vast and wondrous universe to our own bodies which are 'wonderfully and fearfully made'.-QP & QM only serve to deepen my appreciate and strengthen my faith that there is something greater than ourselves and infinitely more purposeful than random chance driving creation. Science that breeds no understanding of the nature of existence is like learning something new about an old friend to me.
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What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.
quantum mechanics: teleporting info
by David Turell , Wednesday, August 14, 2013, 19:36 (4120 days ago) @ David Turell
A further advance toward quantum computers. More accuracy in photon info transfer:-http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/352414/description/Quantum_teleportation_approaches_the_computer_chip
quantum mechanics: free will
by David Turell , Monday, September 02, 2013, 21:13 (4101 days ago) @ David Turell
An essay that supports the quantum establishment of free will:-https://www.bigquestionsonline.com/content/what-does-quantum-physics-have-do-free-will-Note the author relates to the other worldliness that Ruth Kastner envisions
quantum mechanics: free will
by dhw, Tuesday, September 03, 2013, 18:38 (4100 days ago) @ David Turell
DAVID: An essay that supports the quantum establishment of free will:-https://www.bigquestionsonline.com/content/what-does-quantum-physics-have-do-free-will-Note the author relates to the other worldliness that Ruth Kastner envisions.-QUOTE: "Needless to say we are still far away of [sic] understanding which the neural correlates of the different parts of an interferometer are, and how control and randomness interplay in the brain, likely because sleep is still a very poorly understood phenomenon."-Just as consciousness in general is still a very poorly understood phenomenon, together with all its ramifications, including that of free will. I shan't pretend for one moment to have understood the experiments, but would be grateful for an explanation of the following: "What is more, recent experiments are bringing to light that the experimenter's free will and consciousness should be considered axioms (founding principles) of standard quantum physics theory. So for instance, in experiments involving "entanglement" (the phenomenon Einstein called "spooky action at a distance"), to conclude that quantum correlations of two particles are nonlocal (i.e. cannot be explained by signals traveling at velocity less than or equal to the speed of light), it is crucial to assume that the experimenter can make free choices, and is not constrained in what orientation he/she sets the measuring devices."-It is clear to me that an unconscious experimenter is unlikely to conclude anything, but I don't understand how the authors can assume that the experimenter's "free choices" are any freer than the choices we all make in any other field of human activity. If humans are to take responsibility for their actions, "it is crucial to assume" that they are not robots. But does that prove they have free will? I'm not saying we don't have free will ... I'm just asking for an explanation of the logic. QUOTE: "But are we not claiming after all that invisible non-material principles underpin the whole visible world and not only the dynamic of human brains? Does this mean that in addition to the human mind, other minds (the mind of God and other spiritual beings) govern the corporal world? And if any such non-material agency does pervade the whole universe, which behavioral features are distinctively human? These may be interesting questions for the discussion online. Be it as it may, we cannot have nature without non-material (spiritual) agency."-Interesting questions indeed, and I'm sure believers and non-believers alike will come up with whatever answers accord with their own respective theories. Since we understand so little about consciousness, and so little about the quantum world, could we not rewrite the final sentence as follows: we cannot have nature without agencies which at present cannot be explained in known material terms?
quantum mechanics: free will
by David Turell , Tuesday, September 03, 2013, 22:55 (4100 days ago) @ dhw
> dhw:"What is more, recent experiments are bringing to light that the experimenter's free will and consciousness should be considered axioms (founding principles) of standard quantum physics theory. So for instance, in experiments involving "entanglement" (the phenomenon Einstein called "spooky action at a distance"), to conclude that quantum correlations of two particles are nonlocal (i.e. cannot be explained by signals traveling at velocity less than or equal to the speed of light), it is crucial to assume that the experimenter can make free choices, and is not constrained in what orientation he/she sets the measuring devices." > dhw:........ I'm just asking for an explanation of the logic.-He is not logical because he isn't recognizing fully Ruth's contribution. If one realizes that the particles are entangled outside our level of reality, speed of light doesn't matter. Double slits equal spookiness all the time, no matter how we think to manipulate the experiment.-> > dhw: Since we understand so little about consciousness, and so little about the quantum world, could we not rewrite the final sentence as follows: we cannot have nature without agencies which at present cannot be explained in known material terms?-Exactly right.
quantum mechanics: free will
by dhw, Wednesday, September 04, 2013, 20:16 (4099 days ago) @ David Turell
Dhw: It is clear to me that an unconscious experimenter is unlikely to conclude anything, but I don't understand how the authors can assume that the experimenter's "free choices" are any freer than the choices we all make in any other field of human activity. If humans are to take responsibility for their actions, "it is crucial to assume" that they are not robots. But does that prove they have free will? I'm not saying we don't have free will ... I'm just asking for an explanation of the logic. -DAVID: He is not logical because he isn't recognizing fully Ruth's contribution. If one realizes that the particles are entangled outside our level of reality, speed of light doesn't matter. Double slits equal spookiness all the time, no matter how we think to manipulate the experiment. -QUOTE: "Be it as it may, we cannot have nature without non-material (spiritual) agency."-dhw: Since we understand so little about consciousness, and so little about the quantum world, could we not rewrite the final sentence as follows: we cannot have nature without agencies which at present cannot be explained in known material terms?-DAVID: Exactly right.-Thank you for your endorsements of my scepticism, even though the first is not quite what I was getting at. What we have here is a typical example of how people twist information and misuse language to fit their personal agenda. The ordinary layman like myself has no hope of understanding the experiments. He can only go by the comments that accompany them ... comments like: "free will and consciousness should be considered axioms (founding principles) of standard quantum physics theory", and "we cannot have nature without non-material (spiritual) agency". So are free will and the spiritual world a scientific fact? Of course they're not. And scientists ... whether theist or atheist ... should not merge their scientific findings with their personal opinions as if they were all one.
quantum mechanics: free will
by David Turell , Thursday, September 05, 2013, 05:04 (4099 days ago) @ dhw
Dhw: What we have here is a typical example of how people twist information and misuse language to fit their personal agenda. The ordinary layman like myself has no hope of understanding the experiments. He can only go by the comments that accompany them ... comments like: "free will and consciousness should be considered axioms (founding principles) of standard quantum physics theory", and "we cannot have nature without non-material (spiritual) agency". So are free will and the spiritual world a scientific fact? Of course they're not. And scientists ... whether theist or atheist ... should not merge their scientific findings with their personal opinions as if they were all one.-I still say he is confused because he has not seen Ruth's interpretation.
quantum mechanics: new discovery
by David Turell , Monday, September 09, 2013, 15:16 (4094 days ago) @ dhw
"How does a classical temperature form in the quantum world? An experiment at the Vienna University of Technology has directly observed the emergence and the spreading of a temperature in a quantum system. Remarkably, the quantum properties are lost, even though the quantum system is completely isolated and not connected to the outside world. The experimental results are being published in this week's issue of Nature Physics."-"In a way, the atomic cloud behaves like its own miniature universe. It is isolated from the environment, so its behavior is solely determined by its internal properties. Starting with a completely quantum mechanical state, the cloud looks "classical" after some time, even though it evolves according to the laws of quantum physics. That is why the experiment could not just help us to understand the behavior of large atom clouds, it could also help to explain, why the world that we experience every day looks so classical, even though it is governed by quantum laws."- Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2013-09-scientists-physics-classical-quantum-world.html#jCp
quantum mechanics: answers?
by David Turell , Wednesday, September 11, 2013, 19:50 (4092 days ago) @ David Turell
Searching for answers. A new approach to old equations.-"Pawłowski and his colleagues have found that this postulate is respected by classical physics and by standard quantum mechanics, but not by alternative theories that allow for stronger forms of entanglement-like correlations between information-carrying particles. For that reason, the group writes in their paper, "information causality might be one of the foundational properties of nature" — in other words, an axiom of some future, reconstructed quantum theory. (my bold)-What is striking about several of these attempts at quantum reconstruction is that they suggest that the set of laws governing our Universe is just one of many mathematical possibilities. "It turns out that many principles lead to a whole class of probabilistic theories, and not specifically quantum theory," says Schlosshauer. This is in itself a valuable insight. "A lot of the features we think of as uniquely quantum," he says, "are actually generic to many probabilistic theories. This allows us to focus on the question of what makes quantum theory unique."-http://www.nature.com/news/physics-quantum-quest-1.13711?WT.ec_id=NATURE-20130912
quantum mechanics: fractal patterns
by David Turell , Wednesday, September 11, 2013, 19:55 (4092 days ago) @ David Turell
Natures fractals are even at the quantum level:-http://www.nature.com/news/physicists-net-fractal-butterfly-1.13717?WT.ec_id=NATURE-20130912
fractal patterns; new math approach
by David Turell , Wednesday, December 03, 2014, 15:40 (3644 days ago) @ David Turell
Most shapes in geography and biology yield to fractal formulas. here is a new approach for research in this area:-http://phys.org/news/2014-12-simple-patterns-complex-world.html-"The method, named fractal Fourier analysis, is based on new branch of mathematics called fractal geometry.-The method could help scientists better understand the complicated signals that the body gives out, such as nerve impulses or brain waves.-"It opens up a whole new way of analysing signals," said Professor Michael Barnsley, who presented his work at the New Directions in Fractal Geometry conference at ANU.-"Fractal Geometry is a new branch of mathematics that describes the world as it is, rather than acting as though it's made of straight lines and spheres. There are very few straight lines and circles in nature. The shapes you find in nature are rough."
quantum mechanics: answers?
by dhw, Thursday, September 12, 2013, 14:59 (4091 days ago) @ David Turell
DAVID: Searching for answers. A new approach to old equations.-"Pawłowski and his colleagues have found that this postulate is respected by classical physics and by standard quantum mechanics, but not by alternative theories that allow for stronger forms of entanglement-like correlations between information-carrying particles. For that reason, the group writes in their paper, "information causality might be one of the foundational properties of nature" — in other words, an axiom of some future, reconstructed quantum theory." (my bold)-Apparently information causality says "that if one experimenter (call her Alice) sends m bits of information about her data to another observer (Bob), then Bob can gain no more than m classical bits of information about that data — no matter how much he may know about Alice's experiment."-As you have put the sentence in bold, it's clearly important to you, but I'm totally flummoxed. I'd be grateful if first you would explain what is meant by "classical" information. If the authors are saying that Bob will not gain more information from what Alice has sent him than the information she has sent him, it's like saying that if I give you a dollar, I'm not giving you more than a dollar. Not exactly startling. On the other hand, if Bob is given additional information by one of Alice's colleagues, might he not "gain" more than she has sent him? The authors give no further explanation of "information causality", so I hope you can sympathize with my confusion and can tell us what you understand by the term.-http://www.nature.com/news/physics-quantum-quest-1.13711?WT.ec_id=NATURE-20130912-QUOTE: "Still, this does seem an odd way for the Universe to behave. And this is what prompted Fuchs to call for a fresh approach to quantum foundations. He rejected the idea, held by many in the field, that wave functions, entanglement and all the rest represent something real out in the world (see Nature 485, 157...158; 2012). Instead, extending a line of argument that dates back to the Copenhagen interpretation, he insisted that these mathematical constructs are just a way to quantify "observers' personal information, expectations, degrees of belief"."-In other words, as we discussed on our epistemological thread, whatever conclusions are drawn will be subjective. I had great difficulty following Ruth's arguments against subjectivism in her Chapter 7, and if experts in the field can't agree, how can a layman possibly know what is true and what is not?
quantum mechanics: answers?
by David Turell , Thursday, September 12, 2013, 21:21 (4091 days ago) @ dhw
> "Pawłowski and his colleagues have found that this postulate is respected by classical physics and by standard quantum mechanics, but not by alternative theories that allow for stronger forms of entanglement-like correlations between information-carrying particles. For that reason, the group writes in their paper, "information causality might be one of the foundational properties of nature" — in other words, an axiom of some future, reconstructed quantum theory." (my bold) > > dhw: Apparently information causality says "that if one experimenter (call her Alice) sends m bits of information about her data to another observer (Bob), then Bob can gain no more than m classical bits of information about that data — no matter how much he may know about Alice's experiment." > > dhw: As you have put the sentence in bold, it's clearly important to you, but I'm totally flummoxed. I'd be grateful if first you would explain what is meant by "classical" information.-Classical information is the information at the non-quantum level. It is Newton's classical science.- If the authors are saying that Bob will not gain more information from what Alice has sent him than the information she has sent him, it's like saying that if I give you a dollar, I'm not giving you more than a dollar. Not exactly startling. On the other hand, if Bob is given additional information by one of Alice's colleagues, might he not "gain" more than she has sent him? The authors give no further explanation of "information causality", so I hope you can sympathize with my confusion and can tell us what you understand by the term. > > http://www.nature.com/news/physics-quantum-quest-1.13711?WT.ec_id=NATURE-20130912&#... > QUOTE: "Still, this does seem an odd way for the Universe to behave. And this is what prompted Fuchs to call for a fresh approach to quantum foundations. He rejected the idea, held by many in the field, that wave functions, entanglement and all the rest represent something real out in the world (see Nature 485, 157...158; 2012). Instead, extending a line of argument that dates back to the Copenhagen interpretation, he insisted that these mathematical constructs are just a way to quantify "observers' personal information, expectations, degres of belief"." > > dhw: In other words, as we discussed on our epistemological thread, whatever conclusions are drawn will be subjective. I had great difficulty following Ruth's arguments against subjectivism in her Chapter 7, and if experts in the field can't agree, how can a layman possibly know what is true and what is not?-Your confusion is because these folks are ignoring Ruth. She recognizes more than they do Heisenberg's wall of uncertainty and the confusion it brings. These folks keep trying to interpret quantum phenomena as if they are fully within our reality and they are not. They are probabilities and one can only average what to expect. Copenhagen was just a way to go forward and not worry about the confusion.
quantum mechanics: answers?
by dhw, Friday, September 13, 2013, 19:53 (4090 days ago) @ David Turell
DAVID: (quote): " For that reason, the group writes in their paper, "information causality might be one of the foundational properties of nature" — in other words, an axiom of some future, reconstructed quantum theory." (David's bold)-dhw: Apparently information causality says "that if one experimenter (call her Alice) sends m bits of information about her data to another observer (Bob), then Bob can gain no more than m classical bits of information about that data — no matter how much he may know about Alice's experiment."-dhw: As you have put the sentence in bold, it's clearly important to you, but I'm totally flummoxed. I'd be grateful if first you would explain what is meant by "classical" information.-DAVID: Classical information is the information at the non-quantum level. It is Newton's classical science.-Thank you. Sadly I remain just as confused. Now the authors seem to be saying that if Alice sends Bob m bits of information about her quantum experiment, Bob can't gain more than m bits of information about the non-quantum world. Is it not possible for Bob to see connections that Alice doesn't see? After all, the authors think that every construct is subjective (see below). And I still don't know what is meant by "information causality". Perhaps you can define it and explain why it is so important.-http://www.nature.com/news/physics-quantum-quest-1.13711?WT.ec_id=NATURE-20130912-QUOTE: "Still, this does seem an odd way for the Universe to behave. And this is what prompted Fuchs to call for a fresh approach to quantum foundations. He rejected the idea, held by many in the field, that wave functions, entanglement and all the rest represent something real out in the world (see Nature 485, 157...158; 2012). Instead, extending a line of argument that dates back to the Copenhagen interpretation, he insisted that these mathematical constructs are just a way to quantify "observers' personal information, expectations, degrees of belief"."-dhw: In other words, as we discussed on our epistemological thread, whatever conclusions are drawn will be subjective. I had great difficulty following Ruth's arguments against subjectivism in her Chapter 7, and if experts in the field can't agree, how can a layman possibly know what is true and what is not?-DAVID: Your confusion is because these folks are ignoring Ruth. She recognizes more than they do Heisenberg's wall of uncertainty and the confusion it brings. These folks keep trying to interpret quantum phenomena as if they are fully within our reality and they are not. They are probabilities and one can only average what to expect. Copenhagen was just a way to go forward and not worry about the confusion.-On the contrary, these folks REJECT the idea that all of this represents "something real out in the world", and insist that the constructs are subjective! Ruth regards quantum states as "ontologically real possibilities existing in a pre-spacetime realm [...] These possibilities are taken as real because they are physically efficacious, leading indeterministically to transactions which give rise to the empirical events of the spacetime theatre." And the problem of subjectivism "evaporates" because the transaction "is simply observed differently by the different observers" (which in my book = subjectivism). Yes, I am mightily confused.
quantum mechanics: answers?
by David Turell , Friday, September 13, 2013, 22:22 (4090 days ago) @ dhw
> Thank you. Sadly I remain just as confused. Now the authors seem to be saying that if Alice sends Bob m bits of information about her quantum experiment, Bob can't gain more than m bits of information about the non-quantum world. Is it not possible for Bob to see connections that Alice doesn't see? After all, the authors think that every construct is subjective (see below). And I still don't know what is meant by "information causality". Perhaps you can define it and explain why it is so important.-I interpret this to mean that Bob cannot receive any more information than Alice sends.-> DAVID: Copenhagen was just a way to go forward and not worry about the confusion.[/i] > > On the contrary, these folks REJECT the idea that all of this represents "something real out in the world", and insist that the constructs are subjective! Ruth regards quantum states as "ontologically real possibilities existing in a pre-spacetime realm [...] These possibilities are taken as real because they are physically efficacious, leading indeterministically to transactions which give rise to the empirical events of the spacetime theatre." And the problem of subjectivism "evaporates" because the transaction "is simply observed differently by the different observers" (which in my book = subjectivism). Yes, I am mightily confused.-I think most people still want quantum characteristics to act as if they are totally part of our reality. They are not. I still think of the dividing wall as a semi-permiable membrane. Some comes through, some doesn't, but it all makes sense if we could reside on the other side.
quantum mechanics: answers?
by dhw, Saturday, September 14, 2013, 17:29 (4089 days ago) @ David Turell
Dhw: Thank you. Sadly I remain just as confused. Now the authors seem to be saying that if Alice sends Bob m bits of information about her quantum experiment, Bob can't gain more than m bits of information about the non-quantum world. Is it not possible for Bob to see connections that Alice doesn't see? After all, the authors think that every construct is subjective (see below). And I still don't know what is meant by "information causality". Perhaps you can define it and explain why it is so important.-DAVID: I interpret this to mean that Bob cannot receive any more information than Alice sends.-So if Alice sends him a dollar, he can't receive more than a dollar. Hardly worth making a song and dance about. And I still don't know what "information causality" means, or why you find it so important that you put it in bold.-DAVID: Your confusion is because these folks are ignoring Ruth. [...] These folks keep trying to interpret quantum phenomena as if they are fully within our reality and they are not. Dhw: On the contrary, these folks REJECT the idea that all of this represents "something real out in the world", and insist that the constructs are subjective! Ruth regards quantum states as "ontologically real possibilities existing in a pre-spacetime realm [...] These possibilities are taken as real because they are physically efficacious, leading indeterministically to transactions which give rise to the empirical events of the spacetime theatre." And the problem of subjectivism "evaporates" because the transaction "is simply observed differently by the different observers" (which in my book = subjectivism). Yes, I am mightily confused.-DAVID: I think most people still want quantum characteristics to act as if they are totally part of our reality. They are not. I still think of the dividing wall as a semi-permiable membrane. Some comes through, some doesn't, but it all makes sense if we could reside on the other side.-I like the image of the semi-permeable membrane, which is far more comprehensible than what seem to me to be contradictory and often nebulous arguments that even you obviously find difficult to clarify. Your syntax above is misleading. Perhaps it WOULD all make sense if we could reside on the other side, but we can't, so it doesn't. I was genuinely eager to follow Ruth's theories and your defence of them, because it may well be that the quantum world contains solutions to some of the mysteries of our own world ... I'm thinking especially of consciousness and psychic experiences, which from your point of view might shed light on your God theory. But the arguments have to be coherent. So far they aren't, and although I acknowledge that my confusion may be due to my own lack of scientific training, I'm beginning to suspect that the scientists themselves quite literally don't "know" what they're talking about.
quantum mechanics: answers?
by David Turell , Saturday, September 14, 2013, 20:12 (4089 days ago) @ dhw
> dhw: So if Alice sends him a dollar, he can't receive more than a dollar. Hardly worth making a song and dance about. And I still don't know what "information causality" means, or why you find it so important that you put it in bold.-Because I think the universe runs on information supplied by the Creator.- > > Dhw: On the contrary, these folks REJECT the idea that all of this represents "something real out in the world", and insist that the constructs are subjective! Ruth regards quantum states as "ontologically real possibilities existing in a pre-spacetime realm [...] These possibilities are taken as real because they are physically efficacious, leading indeterministically to transactions which give rise to the empirical events of the spacetime theatre." And the problem of subjectivism "evaporates" because the transaction "is simply observed differently by the different observers" (which in my book = subjectivism). Yes, I am mightily confused.-Again, these folks don't know or care about Ruth's concepts. I don't think they reject as ignore other approaches.- > dhw: I like the image of the semi-permeable membrane, which is far more comprehensible than what seem to me to be contradictory and often nebulous arguments that even you obviously find difficult to clarify. Your syntax above is misleading. Perhaps it WOULD all make sense if we could reside on the other side, but we can't, so it doesn't...... I'm beginning to suspect that the scientists themselves quite literally don't "know" what they're talking about.-I take you back to Feynman. Paraphrased: If someone tells you they understand quantum theory, they lie. The amazing part is that the formulas work.
quantum mechanics: answers?
by dhw, Sunday, September 15, 2013, 17:17 (4088 days ago) @ David Turell
dhw: So if Alice sends him a dollar, he can't receive more than a dollar. Hardly worth making a song and dance about. And I still don't know what "information causality" means, or why you find it so important that you put it in bold.-DAVID: Because I think the universe runs on information supplied by the Creator.-I can't find any mention of a Creator in the article, but as I pointed out earlier, Fuchs insisted that these mathematical constructs are just a way to quantify "observers' personal information, expectations, degrees of belief." Presumably, then, "information causality" means whatever you want it to mean.-Dhw: On the contrary, these folks REJECT the idea that all of this represents "something real out in the world", and insist that the constructs are subjective!-DAVID: Again, these folks don't know or care about Ruth's concepts. I don't think they reject as ignore other approaches.-QUOTE: "He rejected the idea, held by many in the field, that wave functions, entanglement and all the rest represent something real out in the world." You could hardly have a more specific rejection. It links up with your own statement that quantum characteristics are not "totally part of our reality", but appears to contradict Ruth's description of quantum states as "ontologically real possibilities existing in a pre-spacetime realm [...] these possibilities are taken as real because they are physically efficacious, leading indeterministically to transactions which give rise to the empirical events of the spacetime theatre." Dhw: I'm beginning to suspect that the scientists themselves quite literally don't "know" what they're talking about.-DAVID: I take you back to Feynman. Paraphrased: If someone tells you they understand quantum theory, they lie. The amazing part is that the formulas work.-I do wish they would at least lie coherently.
quantum mechanics: answers?
by David Turell , Sunday, September 15, 2013, 17:38 (4088 days ago) @ dhw
> Dhw: I'm beginning to suspect that the scientists themselves quite literally don't "know" what they're talking about. > > DAVID: I take you back to Feynman. Paraphrased: If someone tells you they understand quantum theory, they lie. The amazing part is that the formulas work. > > dhw: I do wish they would at least lie coherently.-I think we have exhausted the subject.
quantum mechanics: answers?
by David Turell , Thursday, September 19, 2013, 16:01 (4084 days ago) @ dhw
DAVID: I take you back to Feynman. Paraphrased: If someone tells you they understand quantum theory, they lie. The amazing part is that the formulas work. > > dhw: I do wish they would at least lie coherently.-Now there is a claim to do away with Feynman and use a newly invented math tool, which of course is not reality:-https://www.simonsfoundation.org/quanta/20130917-a-jewel-at-the-heart-of-quantum-physics/-"the amplituhedron, a newly discovered mathematical object resembling a multifaceted jewel in higher dimensions. Encoded in its volume are the most basic features of reality that can be calculated — the probabilities of outcomes of particle interactions."-"Locality is the notion that particles can interact only from adjoining positions in space and time. And unitarity holds that the probabilities of all possible outcomes of a quantum mechanical interaction must add up to one. The concepts are the central pillars of quantum field theory in its original form, but in certain situations involving gravity, both break down, suggesting neither is a fundamental aspect of nature. In keeping with this idea, the new geometric approach to particle interactions removes locality and unitarity from its starting assumptions. The amplituhedron is not built out of space-time and probabilities; these properties merely arise as consequences of the jewel's geometry. The usual picture of space and time, and particles moving around in them, is a construct."-What these folks are doing is constructing their own mental math reality. Ruth's postulate, echoing Heisenberg, is that the quantum uncertainty layer of reality, does not exist in this system. It may help in computations, but there is no evidence it is real as a construct of reality.
quantum mechanics: fluctuations
by David Turell , Wednesday, September 04, 2013, 14:04 (4099 days ago) @ David Turell
Strassler explains our unique universe:-"To say this another way: even though it is possible that there is a special cancellation between the boson fields of nature and the fermion fields of nature, it appears that such a cancellation could only occur by accident, and in only a very tiny tiny tiny fraction of quantum field theories, or of quantum theories of any type (including string theory). Thus, only a tiny tiny tiny fraction of imaginable universes would even vaguely resemble our own (or at least, the part of our own that we can observe with our eyes and telescopes). In this sense, the cosmological constant is a problem of "naturalness", as particle physicists and their colleagues use the term: because it has so little dark energy in it compared to what we'd expect, the universe we live in appears to be highly non-generic, non-typical one."-http://profmattstrassler.com/articles-and-posts/particle-physics-basics/quantum-fluctuations-and-their-energy/
quantum mechanics: confusion
by David Turell , Monday, October 07, 2013, 20:27 (4066 days ago) @ David Turell
Even great scientists are puzzled, and perhaps confused:-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/critical-opalescence/2013/10/07/does-some-deeper-level-of-physics-underlie-quantum-mechanics-an-interview-with-nobelist-gerard-t-hooft/?WT_mc_id=SA_DD_20131007
quantum mechanics: confusion
by David Turell , Monday, October 28, 2013, 13:50 (4045 days ago) @ David Turell
Try reading Strassler's explanation of how they sneak up using computer calculations, one approximation at a time to reach a usable value. Makes your head spin. No wonder Feynman said no one really understands quantum theory.-http://profmattstrassler.com/2013/10/28/quantum-field-theory-string-theory-and-predictions-part-5/
quantum mechanics: confusion
by David Turell , Tuesday, October 29, 2013, 15:11 (4044 days ago) @ David Turell
More complex than ever:-http://phys.org/news/2013-10-quantum-reality-complex-previously-thought.html
quantum mechanics: confusion
by David Turell , Monday, November 04, 2013, 19:26 (4038 days ago) @ David Turell
David Bohm. a different approach:-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/critical-opalescence/2013/11/04/the-wholeness-of-quantum-reality-an-interview-with-physicist-basil-hiley/?WT_mc_id=SA_DD_20131104
quantum mechanics: confusion
by David Turell , Wednesday, November 06, 2013, 14:28 (4036 days ago) @ David Turell
Matt Strassler explaining why we are confused:-http://profmattstrassler.com/2013/11/06/quantum-field-theory-string-theory-and-predictions-part-6/- We don't know more than we know
quantum mechanics: and DNA
by David Turell , Thursday, December 12, 2013, 03:54 (4001 days ago) @ David Turell
Quantum mechanics possibly at work to hold DNA together and perhaps to interpret- http://www.technologyreview.com/view/419590/quantum-entanglement-holds-dna-together-say-physicists/-WOW:-"Phonons are quantum objects, meaning they can exist in a superposition of states and become entangled, just like other quantum objects. To start with, Rieper and co imagine the helix without any effect from outside heat. "Clearly the chain of coupled harmonic oscillators is entangled at zero temperature," they say. They then go on to show that the entanglement can also exist at room temperature. That's possible because phonons have a wavelength which is similar in size to a DNA helix and this allows standing waves to form, a phenomenon known as phonon trapping. When this happens, the phonons cannot easily escape. A similar kind of phonon trapping is known to cause problems in silicon structures of the same size. That would be of little significance if it had no overall effect on the helix. But the model developed by Rieper and co suggests that the effect is profound. -Although each nucleotide in a base pair is oscillating in opposite directions, this occurs as a superposition of states, so that the overall movement of the helix is zero. In a purely classical model, however, this cannot happen, in which case the helix would vibrate and shake itself apart. So in this sense, these quantum effects are responsible for holding DNA together."
quantum mechanics: Bell\'s inequality
by David Turell , Thursday, February 20, 2014, 15:44 (3930 days ago) @ David Turell
Bell's theorum attempts to prove that quantum reality underlies this universe. There is one last proviso to absoutely prove it and Bell's theorum will be fully acceptable, although everyone agrees quantum mechanics must underlie the universe:-http://phys.org/news/2014-02-distant-quasars-bell-theorem.html
quantum mechanics: top quark
by David Turell , Tuesday, February 25, 2014, 15:31 (3925 days ago) @ David Turell
Still slicing and dicing particles:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/02/140224140437.htm
quantum mechanics: top quark
by David Turell , Thursday, April 10, 2014, 19:54 (3881 days ago) @ David Turell
new quark four-way combo:-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/quirky-quark-combo-creates-exotic-new-particle/?&WT.mc_id=SA_SPC_20140410
quantum mechanics: more complex entanglement
by David Turell , Thursday, January 15, 2015, 15:32 (3601 days ago) @ David Turell
More than two systems now shown to entangle:-"The EPR paradox pointed out that two well-separated systems can have a strange type of quantum connection, so that what happens in one system seems to immediately affect the other.-"This connection has recently been called 'EPR steering entanglement'.-"EPR steering is the nonlocality - what Albert Einstein called 'spooky actions at a distance' - associated with the EPR paradox and has traditionally been investigated between only two parties.-"An experiment performed by researchers from the Australian National University (ANU) and Tianjin University supports the predictions of theoretical work developed by researchers at Swinburne and Peking University.-"We used an optical network to experimentally confirm how this spooky type of entanglement can be shared over not just two, but three or more distinct optical systems," Dr Seiji Armstrong, from the Quantum Computing Centre Node at ANU, said."- Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2015-01-einstein-spooky-action-quantum-networks.html#jCp
questions for book?
by rekastner , Saturday, July 20, 2013, 00:50 (4146 days ago) @ David Turell
As I mentioned to some of you, I'm writing a popular book on my new approach to QM. I'd welcome suggestions as to what in particular you'd like to see addressed. -Feel free to contact me privately with these. Contact info available on my website:-transactionalinterpretation.org-Thanks!-Ruth Kastner
questions for book?
by David Turell , Saturday, July 20, 2013, 02:54 (4146 days ago) @ rekastner
As I mentioned to some of you, I'm writing a popular book on my new approach to QM. I'd welcome suggestions as to what in particular you'd like to see addressed. > > Feel free to contact me privately with these. Contact info available on my website: > > transactionalinterpretation.org > > Thanks! > > Ruth Kastner-We are all thrilled that you have given some time to our website. At times I feel too unsure of what I know and understand, but I'll give much thought to your request. I am self-taught to a degree, but it is not as organized as formal courses would have made it. :>))