zaybu
Active Member
We shall see. That is the purpose of this thread. I would be happy to extend the discussion of the baseball analogy, if/when it is challenged by "these people".
The former is superficially more far-fetched because it involves a larger distance. But of course according to quantum mechanics the latter is actually more far-fetched, because it involves two macroscopic systems constantly interacting with their surroundings, thereby breaking any delicate quantum entanglements (or rendering them insignificant at the level of everyday macroscopic experience). It would be impossible under natural conditions, and extremely difficult even under controlled conditions, to get even ONE electron into one brain and preserve its entanglement with a second electron in another brain. Furthermore, even if you could do this, your mind operates on the basis of neurons firing; the firing of neurons involves an incredible number of atoms traversing cell membranes to create voltages, it doesn't depend on whether a single valence electron, in a single chlorine ion, was spin up or down! So the effect of that on your mind is effectively zero. Even if we really let our imaginations run wild and imagine you could create entangled electrons, separate them, and then construct two brains completely using these entangled electrons while preserving all that entanglement (!), whatever happened to one brain STILL probably wouldn't affect the mind of the other brain. Because, again, the firing of a neuron doesn't depend on any particular electron, it's the concerted (essentially classical) motion of ions in response to voltages across cell membranes that matters. You could switch the spins of electrons or even switch electrons or entire atoms, you could do this for every atom in your brain, your computer, or your grandfather clock, and it would likely make no significant difference to its operation. (I realize there are other parameters besides spin which could be entangled in principle, but the same basic argument applies generally.)
But you agree with me here, and you meant that as a rhetorical question, right?
I can recognize that you can dispel those misperceptions. But my question was more aimed to what the general public would think as being farfetched: a spooky action acting as far away as the next galaxy, or something like ESP or some other paranormal effect, acting just a few feet away. Some people, upon reading the former, would easily conclude that the latter is not just that more farfetch. I mean even among scientists, there are those who are actively trying to prove that those paranormal effects are real. And they are in the public with their pseudo-science, often attracting sizable audience, and just because "QM is weird", they get away with their crackpot theory.
Now you're the one advocating spooky action at a distance as a plausible explanation of QM, when it is not, not to most people who have studied QFT, your position on this issue undermines what you are trying to accomplish in this thread.