OK, so if I'm reading you right, it is the natural laws that are causes, not events or objects?
I believe at the micro world Quantum level this is the case.
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OK, so if I'm reading you right, it is the natural laws that are causes, not events or objects?
I hear some scientists claim there is no cause and effect at the micro level. Only patterns and laws. I would rather think that the laws are causes. Isnt that creeping into non physical reality to say that though?
Adam and Eve were the first Conscious Observers to collapse the Wave Function.
We call that event 'The Big Bang'.
Participatory anthropic principle.
Indeed. And shortly after that? Cain, then Able. And Seth too. Lots of Big Bangs, apparently...
That sounds reasonable. Small sized events in the past can make big changes though its unlikely.At that level...at a higher (?more gravitationally consequential) level things are strongly deterministic. To think otherwise is to abandon common sense and practical thinking.
I think in the model it is random, but it may not be random. Observing quantum particles equals interacting with them, so for all studious purposes they appear to have unpredictable behavior.Seems to me, if the position of the electron (for example) after wave function collapse is non-deterministic (random), there is no such thing as strict causality.
That sounds reasonable. Small sized events in the past can make big changes though its unlikely.
I think in the model it is random, but it may not be random. Observing quantum particles equals interacting with them, so for all studious purposes they appear to have unpredictable behavior.
Superposition means particles exist in multiple states at once, but it does not prove that the pattern of collapse is uncaused. How do quantum computers work, then? After all a wave function does not collapse without an observation which implies cause. To me then while it must be modeled as random a collapse must be connected to other events.
That sounds reasonable. Small sized events in the past can make big changes though its unlikely.
I think in the model it is random, but it may not be random. Observing quantum particles equals interacting with them, so for all studious purposes they appear to have unpredictable behavior.
Superposition means particles exist in multiple states at once, but it does not prove that the pattern of collapse is uncaused.
How do quantum computers work, then? After all a wave function does not collapse without an observation which implies cause. To me then while it must be modeled as random a collapse must be connected to other events.
There is a leap from 'Random model' to uncaused. QM has undone Newton's clockwork universe, but with Uncertainty absolute randomness seems like a leap. Would this not require overcoming the Uncertainty Prjnciple? What looks random may just be immeasurable, and what about string theory? Maybe fermions and bosons aren't the smallest particles which also potentially undermines your claim that the eigenvector is uncaused.it isn't the collapse itself that is 'uncaused', but the specific (eigen)-value for the observable after the collapse.
There is a leap from 'Random model' to uncaused. QM has undone Newton's clockwork universe, but with Uncertainty absolute randomness seems like a leap. Would this not require overcoming the Uncertainty Prjnciple? What looks random may just be immeasurable, and what about string theory? Maybe fermions and bosons aren't the smallest particles which also potentially undermines your claim that the eigenvector is uncaused.
I suppose one might object to the use of "random" when 95% of measured values lie within a tiny envelope the width of h/4π.Perhaps the issue is what, exactly, the word 'random' means. It. isn't clear to me how randomness requires the negation of the UC.
It looks like, in essence, you are suggesting the existence of 'hidden variables' that produce the observed effects in a causal way. This possibility is specifically eliminated by Aspect's experiment showing Bell's inequalities are violated. Now, at this point, that only eliminates causality in a very limited situation, but QM deals with many other situations in an essentially equivalent way. Furthermore, the EPR paradox (which Aspect's experiment tested) was specifically proposed as a challenge to the randomness inherent in QM.
String theory is a quantum field theory and has the same sort of uncaused events as ordinary quantum theory. The stringy nature of fundamental particles doesn't change the relevance of Bell's inequalities and their violation. If anything, it underlies that QM is not a causal theory.
Yes, very insightful comments.I think in the model it is random, but it may not be random. Observing quantum particles equals interacting with them, so for all studious purposes they appear to have unpredictable behavior.
Superposition means particles exist in multiple states at once, but it does not prove that the pattern of collapse is uncaused. How do quantum computers work, then? After all a wave function does not collapse without an observation which implies cause. To me then while it must be modeled as random a collapse must be connected to other events.
I think an important lesson that is usually missed in discussions such as these is that in a very real sense quantum mechanics is actually a very simple form of classical mechanics and is if anything more deterministic. In classical mechanics, an absolutely fundamental assumption built into the entire framework is that of isolation: the deterministic equations/dynamics of classical systems hold only for systems that do not interact with their environment or other systems not under consideration (and are not influenced by forces which we consider unimportant enough to ignore). In other words, the laws governing classical systems which render them deterministic only hold for systems which cannot and do not exist- ever.One question is how our classical ideas of causality have to be modified in light of the discoveries of quantum theory. In particular, the fact that initial conditions do NOT determine later states means that the classical concept of causality needs at least some massage.
It remains uncertain as to how the laws of thermodynamics apply within any world. Despite some textbook assertions and presentations, thermodynamics doesn't reduce to statistical mechanics, and even if it did statistical mechanics itself is built upon increasingly shaky assumptions that don't stand up to much scrutiny if they are to be more than an extremely useful framework for dealing with a variety of physical situations (and quantum statistical mechanics, unlike classical statistical mechanics, is built up not from attempts at first principles from its non-statistical counterpart but rather by analogy with statistical mechanics itself).I agree, but it remains uncertain as to how the Laws of Thermodynamics apply within the Quantum world.
It remains uncertain as to how the laws of thermodynamics apply within any world. Despite some textbook assertions and presentations, thermodynamics doesn't reduce to statistical mechanics, and even if it did statistical mechanics itself is built upon increasingly shaky assumptions that don't stand up to much scrutiny if they are to be more than an extremely useful framework for dealing with a variety of physical situations (and quantum statistical mechanics, unlike classical statistical mechanics, is built up not from attempts at first principles from its non-statistical counterpart but rather by analogy with statistical mechanics itself).
I think an important lesson that is usually missed in discussions such as these is that in a very real sense quantum mechanics is actually a very simple form of classical mechanics and is if anything more deterministic. In classical mechanics, an absolutely fundamental assumption built into the entire framework is that of isolation: the deterministic equations/dynamics of classical systems hold only for systems that do not interact with their environment or other systems not under consideration (and are not influenced by forces which we consider unimportant enough to ignore). In other words, the laws governing classical systems which render them deterministic only hold for systems which cannot and do not exist- ever.
Of course, it would have been reasonable for someone like Laplace to suppose that the deterministic structure of classical mechanics was an accurate and true description of physical systems more generally. Sure, there were built in contradictions, but it was not unreasonable to suppose that later developments would tell us how to incorporate ourselves into the physical theories we developed rather than rely on ourselves as external observers capable of freely choosing initial conditions such that we could generalize from them.
And that is in essence what quantum theory did: force us to confront how we had assumed that we were free to generalize from particular physical situations to create the deterministic classical theories we did, and then used the results to assert that we weren't free.
Quantum theory is essentially (and I mean that in the "in its essence" sense) classical- right up until we confront the fact that we can no longer consider ourselves external to the systems we treat as isolated even though they are not.
The deterministic nature of quantum theory breaks down right where the assumptions built into classical theories fail: observation. We cannot consider the determination of initial conditions to be wholly distinct from us nor the system to be isolated.
Initial conditions are set or chosen by observers, and classical systems are measured, tested, etc., by observers. But there is no place for observers capable of doing either in classical physics. Quantum theory just forced us to come to terms with this.
Consciousness isn't the issue. I'm not arguing for quantum mind or anything like that. There are those who have, including those who built the theory. ButThe Schrodinger is a deterministic wave equation. But, because the wave function only determines probabilities and not specifics, it is strange to call QM a deterministic theory. The 'collapse' of a wave function has NOTHING to do with consciousness, but *everything* to do with the interaction of a complex environment. We may be part of that complex environment, but the collapse happens either way.