T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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178.1 | Aha! | INK::KALLIS | | Mon Jul 28 1986 17:29 | 8 |
| >... It is a synchronistic posting ....
Hmm. Synchronosity strikes again! :-)
Maybe there's saomething to it...
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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178.2 | Silly Boy | VAXUUM::DYER | Wage Peace | Tue Jul 29 1986 09:13 | 7 |
| Tomorrow's physics can be expected to be a superset of
today's physics, not a rebuttal. To use the "bleen and grue"
illustration, tommorrow's science won't say "the sky is grue,"
it will say "the sky used to be bleen, but now it's grue."
(Or I could use Newton's laws, which work fine until you get
near the speed of light.)
<_Jym_>
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178.3 | No, "Nervous Boy"! | INK::KALLIS | | Tue Jul 29 1986 09:53 | 7 |
| I think what some folk are afraid of it that "the heart of the lotus
is in the smell was true yesterday, but now it's in the petals."
That is, some people are a bit leery of a relatavistic or metastable
sort of mysticism.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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178.4 | The Copenhagen Interpretation | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Jul 29 1986 10:10 | 41 |
| "Mystical" and "mysticism" have at least as many definitions as
"psychic," so I'm not sure what that book means when it says modern
physics offers no support to a mystical world view.
One thing modern physics DOES do is knock the stuffings out of the
rigid, clockwork materialism that held sway for about three centuries.
This envisioned a universe that consisted simply and solely of ideally
rigid particles moving through Euclidean space over "Euclidean"
time, propelled by central force fields. It's very elegant, very
tidy, very commonplace (once you've got use to it), very imaginable.
And wrong.
It was relativity and quantum mechanics that spawned the scientific
bon mots, "The universe is stranger than we can imagine" and "We
are not sure if your theory is crazy enough to be true." They made
it clear that the world may be understandable, but it is not really
imaginable. That's at least tinged with one meaning of "mystical."
It certainly bothered the hell out of the anti-mystical temperaments
of late 19th-century science and philosophy.
Quantum goes even further. According to the Copenhagen Interpretation
of quantum mechanics, advocated by Niels Bohr and opposed by Einstein,
mind is an essential and irreducible part of everyday physical process.
This is because, according to quantum theory, physical systems cna
easily and frequently get into "mixed states" and states in which
physical measures like position, time, momentum, and energy are
uncertain. According to Bohr, these systems really have no certain
physical state until the are observed. The act of observation,
the touch of a mind, makes the physical system collapse to a particular
state.
Now, Bohr's Copenhagen Interpretation is not the only one available.
But it is the best-publicized and most widely accepted (though I
know most physicists don't think much about their acceptance). And it
certainly has a mystical ring to it. More precisely, it sounds like
close kin to Platonic or Hegelian idealism.
So I can see how some people might use it as bolstering evidence
for a mystical world view. They may or may not go too far, of course.
Earl Wajenberg
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178.5 | Observation is by Physical Interaction | TLE::BRETT | | Mon Aug 11 1986 22:57 | 11 |
|
Bohr did NOT say "touch of the mind" or any such, as far as I'm
aware. He was talking about "observation", not in the sense of
there being an intellectual observor, but more in the sense of
the interaction of "particles" (as much as such things exist).
It is not true that modern physics requires a mind to be anything
more than a complex set of molecules, which is what your note about
"minds" implies.
/Bevin
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178.6 | Just the facts! | STOWMA::ARDINI | From the third plane. | Tue Aug 12 1986 08:37 | 3 |
| There must be a truth in it all and hopefully this will win
out over opinion, no matter how persuasive that opinion is. As
Jack Webb says, "just the facts, mam. Just the facts."....Jorge'
|
178.7 | Wigner's Friend | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Aug 12 1986 10:02 | 40 |
| Re .5
Unfortunately, mere physical interaction does not remove the
uncertainties of quantum events. Eugene Wigner pointed this out
in a thought-experiment now called "Wigner's Friend." It's a sequel
to the better-known thought-experiment of Schoedinger's Cat.
The two of them go like this:
Take a cat and put it in an "infernal device." The device is a
box containing a capsule of poison gas. The capsule will be opened
automatically if the mechanism it tripped by a radioactive decay
particle. We also put in a sample of radioactive material. It
is spitting out particles slowly and completely randomly; according
to quantum mechanical analysis, there is a 50% chance that the sample
will emit a particle in the next ten minutes and thus trip the
mechanism, release the poison, and kill the cat.
Then we wait ten minutes. At the end of ten minutes, according
to the theory, the most complete possible physical description of
the cat is a "mixed state" of 50% dead, 50% alive.
This is bizarre enough, but everyone knows you could just lift the
lid and take a look at the cat. You wouldn't see a "mixed cat,"
but a live one or a dead one. This is where the next thought
experiment starts.
Suppose a friend goes in to look for you. He opens the lid and
looks. Now consider a complete physical description of the friend.
He too goes into a mixed state. 50% chance he sees a dead cat,
50% chance he sees a live cat. Then he comes out and tells you.
YOU, theoretically, go into a mixed state.
There is nothing in quanutm mechanics that can unmix the state.
Yet no one has ever seen a mixed state. Perhaps Bohr did not conclude
that it took the touch of a mind to unmix the states, but that is
what Wigner concluded. Einstein concluded that quantum mechanics
was incomplete. (I suspect he was right.)
Earl Wajenberg
|