Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
Humphreys said:
Ah, but if you understood the Multiverse Interpretation of QM then you would![]()
ROTFLMAO!
That means somewhere people actualy laugh at my jokes!
Humphreys said:
Ah, but if you understood the Multiverse Interpretation of QM then you would![]()
Dancing David said:Number One error: the observer thingy, it is not the act of observation that makes for QM wierdness, it is the ineraction that leads to the observation!
Supplemental, Friday.ceptimus said:If you don't chastise people for wearing certain clothes, or decorating their houses in certain ways, why should you chastise them for buying small bottles of water? He applied a similar argument to comparing the suppliers of homeopathic remedies, with the suppliers of fashion clothing, cosmetics and the like.
Read the full article, it's heartbreaking. It isn't all harmless placebos being dispensed by kindly quacks to competent adults who don't have anything serious wrong with them, not by any means.I recently had a client approach me regarding the death of her 6-year-old daughter. This girl had been diagnosed with leukemia about a year before her death. .... She (the mother) claimed that during her daughter's treatment she came across a book written by a "Homeopathic" practitioner. This book claimed that chemotherapy was, in fact, the cause of most cancer patient's problems, and not the cure. .... the mother took her daughter off all of her medications and refused any further chemotherapy treatment. .... The little girl died shortly thereafter, from what the mother described as a lack of nutrition and over-medication. The mother wanted to sue the doctors for making her daughter sick with chemotherapy and failing to treat her per her own recommendations.
This is a viewpoint frequently propounded by homoeopathy, and it's just frightening.To her (the mother), modern medicine was a conspiracy, and homeopathic medicine was the truth that it sought to undermine.
wipeout said:I believe the decoherent histories approach to quantum theory has made very real progress in eradicating quantum weirdness, if not the quantum weirdos.
Wave function collapse itself is actually a mathematical shortcut and not a physical effect, hence the reason it seems so strange but gives correct results. It's mathematical, not physical. And it's not necessary for the decoherent histories approach either.
Interesting Ian said:
that consciousness collapses the wave function?
jj said:
Who made up that whopper?
Unless you're asserting a random photon, rambling along its way, is somehow concious ...
Ridiculous as usual, Ian, ridiculous as usual.
Interesting Ian said:
This "decoherent histories approach" is more promising than the idea that consciousness collapses the wave function? How so?
wipeout said:
In decoherent histories, you don't actually need a collapse of the wavefunction in quantum theory at all, and so it avoids a lot of the related problems.
Humphreys said:
David, I always believed it was the interaction that caused the photon to be absorbed, and not observation or consciousness.
Can you verify this as fact? Or are you not certain?
Personally I know of no tests that prove consciousness causes the collapse. They all use an instrument to make the measurement and it is the instrument that causes it.
So why do so many believe consciousness plays a part?
Even worse, what happens if it hits a virtual antielectron while inPeter Soderqvist said:Where is the electron when it is in the discontinuous phase,
I mean what kind of place is that, or where is it?????
Dancing David said:
Because they aren't taking thier meds!
I think that somebody used the term observation at soem point and it went on from there. They don't understand QW, they just want an excuse to believe they are right, I guess.
I am not a student of QM, so when I say that it is the interaction leading to an observation that causes the intersection of the wavefunction(they don't collapse), I am hedging my bets in case JJ,Taz or Zombie tell me I am wrong.
Interesting Ian said:
Well what else could do apart from consciousness?
epepke said:The "collapse" of the wavefunction is an idea that comes from some interpretations of QM.
But I think "collapse" is just a way to say that a photon, say, "observed" an electron, so that the probabilistic path of both intersected THIS TIME.
It has a number of problems. One that I think hasn't been thought about nearly enough is that if the wavefunctions collapse, something about them must then again "de-collapse," because you can use the same electrons over and over again, and nobody's watching then.
Yup, on the other hand, if electrons, for example, just have the probabilistic properties described by Schroedinger (or something newer that hasn't hit the street yet, perhaps, no, I don't know of any such thing), there's no collapse, no big problem, it's just a question of an "observation" being an interaction between particles. The fact that a particle has interacted doesn't at all mean that it's not going to keep going in some direction. Given h, we don't even know exactly where it was going or where it is (take your choice) to some extent, of course, so we keep the probabilistic nature fully engaged even during the "observation".
Some days, I feel that amplitudes are all that there are, that whether Schroedinger's cat is alive or dead in some absolute sense is a meaningless question, just that the state of the cat (alive or dead) has amplitudes that cohere with my perception of the cat (trying to scratch me or unusually stinky).
hammegk said:To me it sounds like it may have some of its' own problems though .... can it be validated by experiment as different from predictive-with-observer QM?
Epepke wrote 11-15-2003 02:16 AM: The "collapse" of the wave function is an idea that comes from some interpretations of QM. It has a number of problems. One that I think hasn't been thought about nearly enough is that if the wave functions collapse, something about them must then again "de-collapse," because you can use the same electrons over and over again, and nobody's watching then. The trouble is that there does not seem to be a way to distinguish between the interpretations. I've seen some suggestions, but so far, all the ones I've seen have been flawed.
Wipeout wrote 11-14-2003 04:31 PM: Wave function collapse itself is actually a mathematical shortcut and not a physical effect, hence the reason it seems so strange but gives correct results. It's mathematical, not physical. And it's not necessary for the de-coherent histories approach either.
I only know of a few that even mention it, though. Murray Gell-Mann's book The Quark and the Jaguar and Roland Omnes' book Quantum Philosophy both have some non-technical details of the approach, but are only partly about it and it's not that easy to follow. But as Omnes says, if it was easy to explain then it would be easy to understand and then it wouldn't have taken so long to fix it.
11-15-2003 11:56 AM: However, I think the crucial difference that people can miss about decoherent/consistent histories and things like the EPR paradox is that particles have the measured properties before they are measured.
On his website, Griffith 's uses an example of different colored cards sent in envelopes to different cities. Open one envelope and see the color of the card in one city and you immediately know the color of the card in the envelope in the other city.
