swansont Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1998/02/980227055013.htm Nope. No consciousness here, just detection. The "observer" in this experiment wasn't human. Institute scientists used for this purpose a tiny but sophisticated electronic detector that can spot passing electrons. The quantum "observer's" capacity to detect electrons could be altered by changing its electrical conductivity, or the strength of the current passing through it. Also, read up on John Archibald Wheeler and his Participatory Anthropic Principle (PAP): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interpretations_of_quantum_mechanics#Participatory_Anthropic_Principle_.28PAP.29 […] That will do. There's enough here to prove that the subject is open to debate. Anything labeled "Interpretation of quantum mechanics" is not a physics debate, per se, it's a philosophy debate. Emphasis is on interpretation, not QM. Still no indication this debate is going on in physics circles.
bombus Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 (edited) Nope. No consciousness here, just detection. The "observer" in this experiment wasn't human. Institute scientists used for this purpose a tiny but sophisticated electronic detector that can spot passing electrons. The quantum "observer's" capacity to detect electrons could be altered by changing its electrical conductivity, or the strength of the current passing through it. If there was no conscious observer then there was no experiment. The observation just occurred later - which hinders the argument that it is mere interaction that causes the effect. Anything labeled "Interpretation of quantum mechanics" is not a physics debate, per se, it's a philosophy debate. Emphasis is on interpretation, not QM. Yes exactly my point, but it is occurring in Physics and as a result of physics therefore it is a physics debate. Still no indication this debate is going on in physics circles. I would suggest that you are incorrect, otherwise why would the issue be raised as in the links provided earlier. : Participatory Anthropic Principle (PAP) Main article: Anthropic principle Viewed by some as mysticism (see "consciousness causes collapse"), Wheeler's Participatory Anthropic Principle is the speculative theory that observation by a conscious observer is responsible for the wavefunction collapse. It is an attempt to solve Wigner's friend paradox by simply stating that collapse occurs at the first "conscious" observer. Supporters claim PAP is not a revival of substance dualism, since (in one ramification of the theory) consciousness and objects are entangled and cannot be considered as distinct. Although such an idea could be added to other interpretations of quantum mechanics, PAP was added to the Copenhagen interpretation (Wheeler studied in Copenhagen under Niels Bohr in the 1930s). It is possible an experiment could be devised to test this theory, since it depends on an observer to collapse a wavefunction. The observer has to be conscious, but whether Schrödinger's cat or a person is necessary would be part of the experiment (hence a successful experiment could also define consciousness). However, the experiment would need to be carefully designed as, in Wheeler's view, it would need to ensure for an unobserved event that it remained unobserved for all time [2]. Anyway, I merely asked a question. It is another that made an assertion without backing it up. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts merged Not really, though. It's the physical set up of the experiment, not the intention of the experimenter. Can you prove this? If you have a device that measures which slit it goes through, all you're doing is forcing an external interaction at an earlier point, and that external interaction forces it to be one place or another. Measurement requires interaction, and interaction causes change. What is the interaction? Does the interaction occur at the time of measuremen or at the time the measurement is recorded. It cannot be proven to be the former. If you put a brick wall across the road to measure whether a car goes by, whether or not you choose to "measure" (i.e., build the wall) will certainly affect the outcome, but it would be an odd way of phrasing it to say that your free will caused the car to crash. The car crashed because there was a wall in the way. Why involve a brick? If you just looked, no crash! In the double slit experiment observation of just one slit effected the results of the non-observed slit which was not 'interacted' with. ... But consciousness still doesn't enter into it.[/ That is an opinion. One cannot prove this. It's all just belief my friend:-). Maybe it is time to realise this and enter a new universe. Edited June 15, 2009 by bombus Consecutive posts merged.
swansont Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 If there was no conscious observer then there was no experiment. The observation just occurred later - which hinders the argument that it is mere interaction that causes the effect. This is just moving the goalposts. Yes exactly my point, but it is occurring in Physics and as a result of physics therefore it is a physics debate. By and large it is not physicists in the debate, and the debate is not about the physics, much like a debate about the ethics of medicine is not a debate about medicine, it is a debate about ethics. I would suggest that you are incorrect, otherwise why would the issue be raised as in the links provided earlier. : Participatory Anthropic Principle (PAP) Main article: Anthropic principle Viewed by some as mysticism (see "consciousness causes collapse"), Wheeler's Participatory Anthropic Principle is the speculative theory that observation by a conscious observer is responsible for the wavefunction collapse. It is an attempt to solve Wigner's friend paradox by simply stating that collapse occurs at the first "conscious" observer. Supporters claim PAP is not a revival of substance dualism, since (in one ramification of the theory) consciousness and objects are entangled and cannot be considered as distinct. Although such an idea could be added to other interpretations of quantum mechanics, PAP was added to the Copenhagen interpretation (Wheeler studied in Copenhagen under Niels Bohr in the 1930s). It is possible an experiment could be devised to test this theory, since it depends on an observer to collapse a wavefunction. The observer has to be conscious, but whether Schrödinger's cat or a person is necessary would be part of the experiment (hence a successful experiment could also define consciousness). However, the experiment would need to be carefully designed as, in Wheeler's view, it would need to ensure for an unobserved event that it remained unobserved for all time [2]. Again, the emphasis is on the philosophical interpretation, not the physics. Anyway, I merely asked a question. It is another that made an assertion without backing it up. And it has been answered, yet you persist in presenting a contrary conclusion.
Sisyphus Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 Can you prove this? Do I seriously need to? In this case the extraordinary claim, I think, is that the car didn't crash because it ran into a brick wall, but only because we are aware of it. What is the interaction? Does the interaction occur at the time of measuremen or at the time the measurement is recorded. It cannot be proven to be the former. The interaction is whatever the method of measurement is, which Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle proves it is impossible to make without affecting the measured. Again, you're making the extraordinary claim, and not even about QM. You're saying that, for example, a computer printout doesn't say one thing or the other until you look at it. While technically you can't prove that isn't the case, it's an argument that has nothing to do with the double slit experiment. Why involve a brick? If you just looked, no crash! In the double slit experiment observation of just one slit effected the results of the non-observed slit which was not 'interacted' with. Again, in QM, there's no such thing as "just looking." That is an opinion. One cannot prove this. You can't "prove" anything by that standard, ultimately. But we were talking about what's special about QM, and you keep trying to move the goalposts. It's all just belief my friend:-). Maybe it is time to realise this and enter a new universe. Do you talk like that to people in person?
Ndi Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 (edited) Em, sorry to hop in, but bombus, did you skip over my post about data storage? Unlike unknown physics at *some* particle level we don't really understand, data storage is something we invented, we know how it works. Implying that we observe when the consciousness observes means that the storage medium is in a state of flux until we look at the screen and that the experiment never happened at that time, but at the time we observed it. First, media doesn't do that. Remember, WE know how that works. Trust us. This reminds me of those TV people that believe in ghosts (I don't mean this as an offense). At some point or other, you hear the same magical words: "I ... I don't understand it. No ... I've never seen ANYTHING like it. It can't be explained". And I always wonder - what on Earth pushes these people to jump from "I don't understand" to "it's unexplainable"? Or from "I've never seen anything like it" to "it's not from this world". Just because you can't taste the world being round doesn't mean it isn't. "Prove it to me" is not equal to "I have to touch it" - if it is for you then quantum mechanics is a bad career choice Implying that fixed storage is fluxed means that everything is fluxed and changes as we observe it - not a particle, but the whole shamoogle. Everything. Secondly, you make an unfalsifiable claim - thus arguing outside of science. You asked where the line is drawn between science and speculation/philosophy. The answer is, in your first sentence. When you first asked if it really happens if you don't see it. The answer is yes, because all evidence points to yes, no evidence points to no, and the proposition that the world really blinks into nonexistence every time you close you eyes is unfalsifiable. As a result, anything linked to that concept is speculation. Looking for a real explanation on an abstract and false proposition is futile and will never yields a result, no matter who you argue with and for how long. It's like the color of Santa. I claim he's green. You can guess where THAT debate ends. I guess that whole angels on the head of a pin thousand-year debate missed you. And lastly, as swansont points out, how is this a debate? A debate is between interpretations of the same fact - you argue fact versus interpretation of (nonexistent) different facts. The key difference here is that both parties in a debate agree on the facts but disagree on the implications. To even get into a debate, we need uniform facts. And this is where the non-falsifiability really wrecks stuff. Edited June 16, 2009 by Ndi Rephrase
swansont Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 To even get into a debate, we need uniform facts. And this is where the non-falsifiability really wrecks stuff. Bingo! The non-falsifiable nature of the discussion is how one knows the "debate" is philosophy and not physics.
evil3penguin Posted June 17, 2009 Author Posted June 17, 2009 Still no indication this debate is going on in physics circles. This is actually part of why I posted because I've heard people acting as though our consciousness is effecting the outcome and I don't like it. Here's a video I've seen from the infamously gay dr quantum that says "the electron decided to act differently as though it was aware it was being watched" I think this type of statement is very unscientific. Continually throughout history we have been faced with things that appear mysterious and later we figure them out. Whenever we come to the conclusion that it is caused by something mystical which is unexplainable it slows the progress of science. Even Newton said something like the planets were designed by god so we would not be able to understand them further. I think learning from the past will teach us that the world is probably much more deterministic than we think it is and that we will need more theories to describe the particles smaller than those described by quantum mechanics, particles which we haven't discovered yet.
swansont Posted June 17, 2009 Posted June 17, 2009 There is a whole host of people who are using QM as an excuse to justify the nonsense they peddle. Deepak Chopra and his ilk. So while I can't view the video at the moment to comment specifically on that, let me say that just because someone uses the words of QM doesn't mean they are actually doing QM.
Ndi Posted June 17, 2009 Posted June 17, 2009 (cartoon) Agha. Someone call Occam. OK, now we have a debate. We have the particle, the results, we all agree on the patterns. So we have: a) The phenomenon is unknown to us. Cooool, unknown phenomena. We eat tonight! Let's see, bad equipment, magnetic fields, unsuitable equipment, unknown phenomena, someone sneezed, etc. Logic dictates that if it does THIS left alone and THAT with a sensor in, then the sensor is changing the experiment. b) The ELECTRON has DECIDED to stop in mid-air and WENT through ONE SLIT (emphasis theirs). Favorite explanations feature (depending on century) the sun god, gods, god and, in this enlightened age, the ability of a subatomic particle to choose a path. Alternately, the particle is a tool of higher beings, capable of such feats contrary to all evidence. Choose one. Warning: Choosing b) will have your physicist license revoked. Your hand will not be stamped on your way out. Also, common sense and logic license people frown on losing physics license. -- Seriously though, if you stick a wrench in a sprocket and it stops, it's probably the wrench that stopped it. Saying that it's as if the sprocket KNEW we were putting a wrench in and stopped is not OK. So what, adding a sensor changed the experiment. All sensors ever added to anything change the experiment. We have known that for millennia. Sometimes it's so small we don't care. Sometimes it's so big that measuring destroys the sample/properties (uncertainty). Even looking at a blue object changes its color. To see color you need light. You have light, you have energy and the paint slowly ages. In 5 years, it will be light blue. You look at it, the paint changes color. It's not like the paint knows it's being watched. (I am aware that it's the lighting not the watching that does that. Work with me here). Why would anyone assume the particle has a steering wheel and brakes? -- evil3penguin: Throughout the ages, *some* people wondered why those things were there. Other wondered why God would put it there. It's no different today, it will be no different for a long time, regardless of that god's name. Human Consciousness is also a type of god, since it can do stuff nobody else can. Will, strength, abstract thinking, awareness. Same deal.
bombus Posted June 17, 2009 Posted June 17, 2009 (edited) This is just moving the goalposts. I am not trying to be evasive and moving the goalposts. The placing of goalposts IS the argument. If conscious observation is involved then it makes no difference when the observation takes place. That is the crux of the issue - at least according to some interpretations of QM. By and large it is not physicists in the debate, and the debate is not about the physics, much like a debate about the ethics of medicine is not a debate about medicine, it is a debate about ethics. I get what you are saying, but I would still say it is a debate occurring within the subject of physics. See here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interpretation_of_quantum_mechanics Again, the emphasis is on the philosophical interpretation, not the physics. Well, yes, I would agree. But ultimately physics and indeed all science is a branch of philosophy. Interpreting QM however does indeed blur the boundaries though. Again, that's at the crux of the problem when people try to make sense of QM. I am sure I don't need to highlight how many interpretations there are! And it has been answered, yet you persist in presenting a contrary conclusion. To your satisfaction maybe, but perhaps not to everyone's. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts merged Merged post follows: Consecutive posts merged Do I seriously need to? In this case the extraordinary claim, I think, is that the car didn't crash because it ran into a brick wall, but only because we are aware of it. Detection of electrons passing through just one slit affects electrons passing through the other where there has been no interaction. This is difficult to explain through purely the detector affecting the experiment. The interaction is whatever the method of measurement is, which Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle proves it is impossible to make without affecting the measured. Yes, acording to some interpretations Again, you're making the extraordinary claim, and not even about QM. You're saying that, for example, a computer printout doesn't say one thing or the other until you look at it. While technically you can't prove that isn't the case, it's an argument that has nothing to do with the double slit experiment. Well, yes, it is an extraordinary claim. Astonishing and unbelievable in fact. However, some of the greatest minds have struggled to interpret the results, and if it is simply a case of the physical interaction affecting the result I doubt QM would have caused such a fuss (and continues to do so). But another standpoint is that it is not really that astonishing. The very question 'Why is there anything?' cannot be answered by science (or even gods for that matter) and yet the fact that existence exists () is astonishing. From the big bang/beginning of existence is anything really THAT astonishing? Again, in QM, there's no such thing as "just looking." What about not looking at one of the slits? You can't "prove" anything by that standard, ultimately. But we were talking about what's special about QM, and you keep trying to move the goalposts. I disagree that I am moving the goalposts. As said above, the placement of the goalposts are integral to the issue, some (but not all) interpretations involving conscious observation suggest that it's a goalpost that does continually move... Do you talk like that to people in person?[/ Only to those that believe in the many worlds interpretation;) Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedBingo! The non-falsifiable nature of the discussion is how one knows the "debate" is philosophy and not physics. You are correct of course, and one can't argue with this. But in the case of QM and it's wierd results maybe its acceptable? I think that QM pushes the issue of philosophy/science into our faces and we should not retreat from tackling the problem. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedNdi, To answer your question... In general terms you are correct, but experiments have been undertaken with pre-recorded data where 'observers' have been asked to try to influence the data e.g make data recorded by a random number generator produce numbers above 50. The effect seems to work with real-time random number generators but also works with pre-recorded data (the results cannot be accounted for by chance)! I find this astonishing, unbelievable, and though I'm willing to remain skeptical, am also willing to believe it could be possible. But to get back to my original question (where all this debate stemmed from) I am not sure that I agree that the issue about observation and interaction being the same thing is universally accepted. E.g. In Einstein's theory, any object that has mass causes a warp in the structure of space and time around it. This warping produces the effect we experience as gravity. Penrose points out that tiny objects, such as dust specks, atoms and electrons, produce space-time warps as well. Ignoring these warps is where most physicists go awry. If a dust speck is in two locations at the same time, each one should create its own distortions in space-time, yielding two superposed gravitational fields. According to Penrose's theory, it takes energy to sustain these dual fields. The stability of a system depends on the amount of energy involved: the higher the energy required to sustain a system, the less stable it is. Over time, an unstable system tends to settle back to its simplest, lowest-energy state: in this case, one object in one location producing one gravitational field. If Penrose is right, gravity yanks objects back into a single location, without any need to invoke observers or parallel universes.[1] Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedThere is a whole host of people who are using QM as an excuse to justify the nonsense they peddle. Deepak Chopra and his ilk. So while I can't view the video at the moment to comment specifically on that, let me say that just because someone uses the words of QM doesn't mean they are actually doing QM. Yes that is right. But we shouldn't throw the baby out with the bathwater. There are many emminent scientists who are vey serious about some of the implications of QM that some find unpalatable. ! Edited June 17, 2009 by bombus Consecutive posts merged.
Sisyphus Posted June 17, 2009 Posted June 17, 2009 When I say you're "moving the goalposts," this is what I mean: You: QM is amazing! One interpretation is that [phenomenon] doesn't exist until a conscious mind looks at it. Me: But in order to say that's possible, you need to demand a standard of proof in which you could say the same about anything. It's not special to QM. You: Exactly! Me: ...
bombus Posted June 18, 2009 Posted June 18, 2009 When I say you're "moving the goalposts," this is what I mean: You: QM is amazing! One interpretation is that [phenomenon] doesn't exist until a conscious mind looks at it. Me: But in order to say that's possible, you need to demand a standard of proof in which you could say the same about anything. It's not special to QM. You: Exactly! Me: ... I concede I have been sloppy in my response. The thing is, you want proof that consciousness causes collapse of wave function (is that more or less what you are getting at?). There is no proof outside QM itself, because the only scientific study that suggests this could be a possibility is QM, so it becomes a circular argument. The possibility has not, as far as I am aware, ever been raised before as there has never been a need for the proposal before QM. There is no hard proof for any interpretations of QM - hence the list of interpretations (some more popular than others), but to say that as there is no proof of consciousness causing collapse means it can't be true simply avoids the issue so it can never be solved. It remains a possiblity that may yet gain evidence although probably indirectly, as it's pretty hard to prove directly (as is the brain in a box hypothesis, or simulation argument etc). As has been mentioned above the whole subject ends up being more like metaphysics than hard physics, but that is the nature of QM. I am not offering any solutions to intractible problems here, but I would say that we need to remain open minded and not reject theories just because they *seem* unbelieveable - as there is lots in QM - and science for that matter - that seems unbelievable but ends up being considered the paradigm. Plate tectonics could be thought of as quite unbelievable, but is widely accepted. Dark Matter too, I am sure you can think of others.
iNow Posted June 18, 2009 Posted June 18, 2009 The thing is, you want proof that consciousness causes collapse of wave function (is that more or less what you are getting at?). NO! He wants proof that you understand that consciousness IS NOT REQUIRED for the wave to collapse.
Sisyphus Posted June 18, 2009 Posted June 18, 2009 I concede I have been sloppy in my response. The thing is, you want proof that consciousness causes collapse of wave function (is that more or less what you are getting at?). No, I want you to acknowledge that you understand that you're not talking about QM. The question that is up in the air is whether or not a computer printout has ink on it that says A or B before a conscious mind looks at it. I know it can't be proven one way or the other. But what can't be proven one way or another is not a matter of interpretation of QM. It's a matter of interpretation of all sentient experience. Does the world disappear when I close my eyes? Can't prove it. Do the sensations my mind experiences even correspond with an external world that's anything like the one my mind pieces together? Can't prove it. Are my memories or my rational faculty at all trustworthy? Don't know. When I conclude that 2+2=4, is the fact that I can't see how it could possibly be otherwise "proof" of anything? Nope. The possibility has not, as far as I am aware, ever been raised before as there has never been a need for the proposal before QM. Actually, that particular philosophical tradition is several centuries older than QM.
bombus Posted June 18, 2009 Posted June 18, 2009 (edited) No, I want you to acknowledge that you understand that you're not talking about QM. The question that is up in the air is whether or not a computer printout has ink on it that says A or B before a conscious mind looks at it. Of course I am talking about QM. What do you think those paragraphs I have posted refer to? I think you are all forgeting that I am not the proponent of the theory, nor am I defender of it. This whole conversation is actually about whether or not the debate about the role of consciousness has been resolved. All I have been trying to demonstrate is that it has not, and why, according to some interpretations - and I think I have been able to prove that. If you think the debate HAS been resolved, can you please provide me with proof. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedNO! He wants proof that you understand that consciousness IS NOT REQUIRED for the wave to collapse. I understand that some interpretations do not require consciousness to cause wave function collapse, but other interpretations do. Edited June 18, 2009 by bombus Consecutive posts merged.
swansont Posted June 18, 2009 Posted June 18, 2009 As has been mentioned above the whole subject ends up being more like metaphysics than hard physics, but that is the nature of QM. No, that is the nature of the interpretations of QM. One problem being that interpretations are basically an attempt to explain QM using a framework of familiar, classical concepts. I am not offering any solutions to intractible problems here, but I would say that we need to remain open minded and not reject theories just because they *seem* unbelieveable - as there is lots in QM - and science for that matter - that seems unbelievable but ends up being considered the paradigm. Plate tectonics could be thought of as quite unbelievable, but is widely accepted. Dark Matter too, I am sure you can think of others. But there is evidence for these phenomenon. The problem with the QM/consciousness connection is that if you move the parameters around enough, as has happened here (the detector not being conscious vs. the detector being placed by a conscious being) then it's not falsifiable. The only way that we can confirm the result of an experiment is to look at it, so there will always be a path to where consciousness was involved. So if that's the contention, then game over. Not falsifiable = not science. But the framework where e.g. the electron "knows" that the interaction is from a detector which was placed by a conscious being vs. just being some stray field is not part of QM.
Ndi Posted June 19, 2009 Posted June 19, 2009 In general terms you are correct, but experiments have been undertaken with pre-recorded data where 'observers' have been asked to try to influence the data e.g make data recorded by a random number generator produce numbers above 50. The effect seems to work with real-time random number generators but also works with pre-recorded data (the results cannot be accounted for by chance)! I find this astonishing, unbelievable, and though I'm willing to remain skeptical, am also willing to believe it could be possible. And this is where you make your mistake - you ignore evidence and choose to BELIEVE. Look, I wasn't kidding, someone call Occam. If you make a random number generator that yields over-50, then it's busted. Then you do it again, with pre-recorded data that HAS been observed and fixed (some guys in white coats somewhere KNOW what the numbers will be). You again get over-50. My first guess is you blew it. Bug in siftware, bug in generator, you name it. You might not be an experienced person with random numbers but as a 15yr+ programming experience, I'll let you in on a few secrets: a) random number are never random. They are extracted from the decimals of a function with a very long period. Better systems have a recorded set and work with that b) random numbers are repeated if you take the same seed. In PCs and similar implementations, Randomize() skips in the decimal string at current time(). If you set the clock at 1:00:00, 19-06-2009 and call randomize() then Random(3), you get 1. Reset time and call again, it again 1. Not only that, but the sequence restarts. I can write you a program that calls Random() 50.000 times, draws a graph and tomorrow morning when you re-run, it will reproduce exactly. Once little bug in code and you have a shot experiment. c) Random numbers all sum up to zero (or whatever they collapse to). There is no obligation for them to be UNIFORM, though. Perfect random numbers are: 1,1,1,1 ...., 1, -300000. This sequence is random (not determined by a function), averages 0 and it's 300.001 numbers long. Perfect (statistical) string but only works if you take 300.001 samples. Any other subsample and you get skewed results. c.2) As a result of c), if you draw the graph of random sum function RS, with Rs begin RS(x) := RS(x) + Random(1,-1) (or Signum(-100 + Random(200)) if you will), then the function will hover around zero at some point or other. While it WILL go through zero several times and the sum of the values will tend to be zero, any subsection of the function will look full-positive or full-negative because in that section numbers will tend to be negative, but the sum is positive. What I'm trying to say if I didn't put you all to sleep is that (ESPECIALLY WITH HUMAN-PC EXPERIMENTS) these things mean squat unless you do many, many, many permutations. PC Random() will settle statistically after 2^31 extractions(signed 32 bit because Randomize() takes such a number. Anything less and you get positive-exceeded or negative-exceeded results. The problem with humans is that that can only do a few. A thousand is a good guess before they go nuts, and focusing hard wears them out in an hour or so, with a number every 3 seconds that's roughly one thousand. 2^31 is 2 billion. Divided by 1000, it's (we'll say 1024), that 2^21, or 2 million (roughly). Brought into real time, this is the equivalent of someone getting an idea of what you do in a day by observing you for 41.1 milliseconds. This is roughly the time it takes a flash from a photo to light, expose and die off. From a statistical point of view, you are hanging in mid air, frozen. You think people who play lottery, slots, etc don't WANT to win? There's a reason they never made the news, don't win lottery, don't play blackjack, etc. There are games that lean 51-49 for the house. They'd be rich, now wouldn't they?
bombus Posted June 19, 2009 Posted June 19, 2009 No, that is the nature of the interpretations of QM. One problem being that interpretations are basically an attempt to explain QM using a framework of familiar, classical concepts. Yes, that's fair enough. It was those interpretations we were discussing, but I should have been more precise in my answer. But there is evidence for these phenomenon. Well, I don't want to go off topic and debate the merits of plate tectonics and dark matter (but neither have been proven beyond all doubt) but that's not my point. My point is that just because a theory sounds too amazing is not in itself a good reason to discount it, as many accepted paradigms are quite amazing. Also, there is experimental evidence to suggest that conciousness can affect QM. The problem with the QM/consciousness connection is that if you move the parameters around enough, as has happened here (the detector not being conscious vs. the detector being placed by a conscious being) then it's not falsifiable. The only way that we can confirm the result of an experiment is to look at it, so there will always be a path to where consciousness was involved. So if that's the contention, then game over. Not falsifiable = not science. I do get what you are saying and you are not wrong (it is an intractable problem) but it does not HAVE to go so far that we have to think that 'the moon disappears when your not looking'. Roger Pernrose's interpretation suggests that conciousness does play a role at the sub atomic level. He proposes that conciousnesss can affect sub-atomic particles, but not macro scale objects. He suggests that the greater the mass the more quickly wave function collapses (kinda) but that at the quantum scale conciousness can cause collapse. But the framework where e.g. the electron "knows" that the interaction is from a detector which was placed by a conscious being vs. just being some stray field is not part of QM. But the idea that it is just a result of the equipment does not correlate with the evidence either. E.g. observing one slit affects the particles passing through other. Anyway. Are we agreed that the subject of observer = interaction is still debateable and has not been resolved?
bombus Posted June 19, 2009 Posted June 19, 2009 And this is where you make your mistake - you ignore evidence and choose to BELIEVE. Look, I wasn't kidding, someone call Occam. If you make a random number generator that yields over-50, then it's busted. Then you do it again, with pre-recorded data that HAS been observed and fixed (some guys in white coats somewhere KNOW what the numbers will be). You again get over-50. My first guess is you blew it. Bug in siftware, bug in generator, you name it. You might not be an experienced person with random numbers but as a 15yr+ programming experience, I'll let you in on a few secrets: a) random number are never random. They are extracted from the decimals of a function with a very long period. Better systems have a recorded set and work with that b) random numbers are repeated if you take the same seed. In PCs and similar implementations, Randomize() skips in the decimal string at current time(). If you set the clock at 1:00:00, 19-06-2009 and call randomize() then Random(3), you get 1. Reset time and call again, it again 1. Not only that, but the sequence restarts. I can write you a program that calls Random() 50.000 times, draws a graph and tomorrow morning when you re-run, it will reproduce exactly. Once little bug in code and you have a shot experiment. c) Random numbers all sum up to zero (or whatever they collapse to). There is no obligation for them to be UNIFORM, though. Perfect random numbers are: 1,1,1,1 ...., 1, -300000. This sequence is random (not determined by a function), averages 0 and it's 300.001 numbers long. Perfect (statistical) string but only works if you take 300.001 samples. Any other subsample and you get skewed results. c.2) As a result of c), if you draw the graph of random sum function RS, with Rs begin RS(x) := RS(x) + Random(1,-1) (or Signum(-100 + Random(200)) if you will), then the function will hover around zero at some point or other. While it WILL go through zero several times and the sum of the values will tend to be zero, any subsection of the function will look full-positive or full-negative because in that section numbers will tend to be negative, but the sum is positive. What I'm trying to say if I didn't put you all to sleep is that (ESPECIALLY WITH HUMAN-PC EXPERIMENTS) these things mean squat unless you do many, many, many permutations. PC Random() will settle statistically after 2^31 extractions(signed 32 bit because Randomize() takes such a number. Anything less and you get positive-exceeded or negative-exceeded results. The problem with humans is that that can only do a few. A thousand is a good guess before they go nuts, and focusing hard wears them out in an hour or so, with a number every 3 seconds that's roughly one thousand. 2^31 is 2 billion. Divided by 1000, it's (we'll say 1024), that 2^21, or 2 million (roughly). Brought into real time, this is the equivalent of someone getting an idea of what you do in a day by observing you for 41.1 milliseconds. This is roughly the time it takes a flash from a photo to light, expose and die off. From a statistical point of view, you are hanging in mid air, frozen. You think people who play lottery, slots, etc don't WANT to win? There's a reason they never made the news, don't win lottery, don't play blackjack, etc. There are games that lean 51-49 for the house. They'd be rich, now wouldn't they? I would venture that it is you that is ignoring the evidence. You can explain away the evidence if you want, and choose to BELIEVE that its all an error, a hoax, or whatever. You can BELIEVE what you like. Do you really think the issues you mention have not been considered by the experimenters? They are not cranks you know! Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedNo, you're not. I am talking about some interpretations of QM
Sisyphus Posted June 19, 2009 Posted June 19, 2009 I am talking about some interpretations of QM No, you aren't. The statement, "it might be the case that the paper doesn't say anything until a conscious mind becomes aware of it" is not especially related to quantum mechanics.
bombus Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 No, you aren't. The statement, "it might be the case that the paper doesn't say anything until a conscious mind becomes aware of it" is not especially related to quantum mechanics. Sorry, I have no idea what you are on about. Please explain.
Kyrisch Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 At the risk of saying something that might already have been touched upon, in the double-slit experiment, the results changed without ever being relayed through a consciousness. Electrons through double slit = interference pattern; electrons through double slits with (non conscious) detectors = particular behaviour (as conveyed by the screen on the other side of the slits). Sure, a consciousness observed the photons coming from the screen which showed the difference in behaviour of the electrons, but surely the wavefunction collapse occurred much earlier, at the point of detection. And even if the detectors did not actually record anything, their very presence caused the breakdown of the probability curve.
bombus Posted June 21, 2009 Posted June 21, 2009 At the risk of saying something that might already have been touched upon, in the double-slit experiment, the results changed without ever being relayed through a consciousness. Electrons through double slit = interference pattern; electrons through double slits with (non conscious) detectors = particular behaviour (as conveyed by the screen on the other side of the slits). Sure, a consciousness observed the photons coming from the screen which showed the difference in behaviour of the electrons, but surely the wavefunction collapse occurred much earlier, at the point of detection. And even if the detectors did not actually record anything, their very presence caused the breakdown of the probability curve. Why do you say 'but surely the wavefunction collapse occurred much earlier' ? There is no surely about it. This is IMHO a big issue in science where investigation can be influenced more by incredulity than impartial analysis of evidence. See here: http://cogprints.org/3489/
Sisyphus Posted June 21, 2009 Posted June 21, 2009 Sorry, I have no idea what you are on about. Please explain. Ok, the statement is equivalent to: "I have no way of proving whether or not the world disappears when I close my eyes." This is true. It can be applied to anything, and "anything" includes quantum mechanics. However, it has no special significance to QM.
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