Halc
Thanks for the detailed and informative reply, and sorry for the delay responding
Gertie wrote: ↑
July 29th, 2018, 10:10 pm
That doesn't seem to get us very far then, does it? In terms of being able to establish if serial (arrow of time) cause and effect, and independently existing stuff, are mutually exclusive possibilities ?
You mean does my answer prove Bell's theorem. No, it doesn't. I don't know my physics well enough to express exactly why these two principles are mutually exclusive.
Fair enough.
And isn't there a deeper issue, to do with defining reality in terms of maths (an abststract desciptor) identified/created by conscious subjects, to describe 'real stuff''? What's the justification for giving maths a stronger claim to reality, than the stuff it's describing?
This is all based on empirical results, not some conclusion drawn from a mathematical abstraction. The theory says that no mathematical abstraction can have both those properties and still be consistent with empirical results.
Ah OK.
So the upshot is, QM gives results, which when interpreted, are hard to reconcile with classical physics, and our observations/intuitions about eg time/causal relationships.
It seems like there's no settled explanation, but this at least suggests we should keep an open mind to the world being very different in reality to how we've evolved to perceive and think about it.
Is there any physics behind the idea that the Subject-Object relationship (Conscious Observer-Non-Conscious Observed) are key to the ontological/independent existence of either, as Taminen speculates?
Of sharing a model, or a model of the same apple shared between observers? Describing the universe different ways is not really "sharing a model of the universe".
I'd put it this way.
I have to take a leap of faith to accept the model exists independently of my directly known phenomenal experiencing of it (sights, sounds, sensations, memories, thoughts, reasoning etc). Including you and the apple and my own body/brain. But once I take that leap of inference, it's a world where your experiencing and mine, and our internal models, are each unique, but also largely tally - that's what empirical science is built on, how patterns are observed and theories about our shared universe are constructed.
That's why I can point at what I call a green apple, and you can say yes, you see a green apple too. It's possible (tho unlikely imo) that you're actually looking at something I would call a purple square, or hearing a symphony, or have bat sonar. Never-the-less we can communicate coherently about 'the green apple', because we have a similar enough shared model and signifiers which work. We can even talk about abstract ideas like the apple falling because of gravity, make predictions, etc. And you can explain some QM stuff to me, adding to my personal model of the world - which adjusts from moment to moment.
Now within our shared (inter-subjective if you like) model of the universe there is evidence that our phenomenal experiencing (consciousness) is something that evolved in our ancestors well after non-conscious stuff existed. Which is evidence that stuff can exist independently of being observed or measured. And also that my senses, cognitive abilities etc evolved for 'good enough' utility not perfect accuracy, and for navigating (perceiving and understanding) the world a particular ('classical') level of granularity.
Now there is also QM (and who knows what next), in our shared model, which raises questions about issues of locality, time, cause and effect, the fundamental nature of stuff, and the relationship between phenomenological experiencing/measuring and stuff.
But I'm not sure it offers answers yet, on the issues raised in this thread. For me it suggests we should be wary of making hard claims.
But all that exists can't be maths or QM, because they are mere abstract descriptions of something else - descriptions of stuff doing things. Either/or the describer/the described must exist for descriptions to exist.
Something must exist for something to exist, a tautology I guess. But I don't find objective existence necessary for the apple to stand in relation to me, thus allowing me to experience it.
I think you can get a handle on this if you think about the 'heirarchy of knowing'.
You can't know anything exists but your own direct phenomenological experiencing. Even your embodied self.
So you know for certain your experiencing of the apple, and of the 'external world' exists.
If you infer that those experiences are describing something which exists in reality, then you can infer you know some things (roughly,imperfectly, limitedly) about them.
If your experiences tally with mine, and nearly everybody else, then we have a shared model. One we can communicate coherently about, and which includes something we agree to call green apples. And science, the Standard Model of Physics, QM, etc. Which can help us correct and refine some of our rough, imperfect, limited perceptions and understanding of our shared world model.
But all that is inside the model, parts of it - the only thing you know for certain, is your experiencing of the green apple.
That's a difficult bias to drop, but try as I did, I could not identify what either the describer or the described being 'real' provided except to make the experience real. I'm not a realist, so that doesn't bother me. Even an idealist is a realist of sorts, believing experience to be real, and then failing the same old question of why the idealist happens to be real.
My view is that if you take scepticism to its logical conclusion, all that can be known for certain as being real are the experiences themselves. You can even discard the Subject-Experiencer, tho this seems counter-intuitive.
The descriptions might be accurate or inaccurate, or tell us something more about the nature of actual stuff, but they wouldn't exist as descriptions, if there wasn't something to be described.
I'm describing what we experience. That's something. It's just not objective.
I'd say that 'objective' is a notion that refers to our shared model, more akin to intersubjective.
'A measurement is taken' means what? I'm never sure. Does it require a conscious observer?
Interpretation dependent.
Aaaagh! Doesn't this stuff drive you bonkers?
Giving up now! But again, thank you for taking the time to explain. Unfortunately it's just beyond me, can't get me noggin round it.
In the context of this thread, my general points would be that -
QM is a way of describing reality, not 'the stuf of reality' itself.
Well, some interpretations say it IS the stuff itself. Nobody has actually ever found stuff, no matter how close they look. What they find instead is a mathematical wave function (which uses imaginary numbers). Some QM interpretations say this function is the actual stuff of reality, and some just say it is a descriptive part of the model or some such. MWI for instance posits that the wave function (and only the wave function) is actually what the universe is.
Huh? But a wave is just a shape, a description of a wave-shaped something. Not a something itself.
It seems that reality can be described in different ways at different levels of resolution (classical, quantum and who knows what else we haven't discovered), but there still has to be a reality for it to describe.
Plenty of things describe non-real things, so it just doesn't seem to follow. But hey, most interpretations say there is reality being described by the model. I'm not saying there is no objective reality, just that I don't take it as a given. My favored model describes my reality. It is quite real, just not objectively real.
I think that's kinda true of everybody, but we can also have coherent discussions beyond that, create (imperfect, limited) models within the caveated 'heirarchy of knowing'.