mccrone said:
It is to do with temporal as well as spatial
correlations. So delayed choice twin slit experiments are a stark demonstration.
The point is that delayed choice twin slit experiments don't
tell us anything more about time than we already knew.
mccrone said:
This might be how a human observer chooses to index
events - motivated by a belief in cause and effect or locality. But nonlocality raises the question of when an event really occurs.
The point I was making was that a global scale observer would
see both ends of an event as part of the same effective moment.
So both the photon emission by a star in some distant galaxy and
its "much later" absorbtion by my eye.
An observer whose field of vision includes a supernova a
billion light years from Earth and also Earth will observe
the light created by the supernova taking a billion years to
reach earth. He wouldn't see the birth of the supernova
and the recording of a picture of it on Earth as happening
at the same time.
Questions about when events occur arise when we use different
clocks to index the occurance of spatially separated events.
In a global or 'system' context, which is what 'nonlocality' refers
to, if the spatially separated events are timed by the same
clock then the temporal relationship between the events
is less problematic.
For example, wrt the 'twin paradox' of special relativity,
if a 'global' observer were to time the traveller's journey by
using, say, revolutions of the earth, then he would observe
that the journey took a certain number of revolutions -- which
would be the same for the earthbound twin as for the
travelling twin.
mccrone said:
What the proof of nonlocality tells us is that locality-based models of causality are incomplete (though they are certainly still useful). So I was talking about the kinds of models based on hierarchy theory that might present a different view of time.
Nonlocality refers to spatially separated events that are parts
of a single behavioral system. Nonlocality is evident in nature.
There is a hierarchy of systems, or observational contexts.
The scale of behavior/observation doesn't change the basic
meaning of 'time', or contradict the standard notion of
local causality.
mccrone said:
Yeah but then you have the problem of the chicken and the
egg. Cause and effect thinking runs into paradoxes - like how
can a something (the universe) spring out of a nothing.
The origin of the universe will remain a matter of untestable
speculation for a long time I think.
Anyway, cause and effect thinking isn't paradoxical. Causes
can't happen after the effects that they cause, by definition.
Given any, causally related, chicken-egg duo, either the egg
was laid by the chicken or the chicken hatched out of the
egg. If they 'sprang' into existence at the same time, then
they're not causally related to each other -- but they might
be nonlocally related as parts of a system that encompasses
them both.
mccrone said:
So to get out of this, you have to look into other causal models.
So for example, ones that start with a state of vague everythingness (cf: Anaximander, Peirce) and then dichotomise or symmetry-break to produce two crisp limits on being. So we would now start with a vague chicky-egginess and watch it divide asymmetrically into a chicken and egg
(or if you like, the first egg inside the first chicken). So now causes are effects.
There's nothing to "get out of."
Two events are causally related if there is an invariant,
sequential relationship wrt their occurance. Which one is
called the cause and which one the effect depends on their
relative placement in the temporal indexing of the sequence
of events.
mccrone said:
I realize that alternatives to locality and mechanistic logic are not fashionable. But non-locality has to be accounted for within some
causal model unless you want this aspect of reality to remain
a mystery.
What remains to be understood is the deep, qualitative nature of
reality. We can describe/predict the gravitational behavior of
macroscopic objects pretty accurately, but don't know what
causes it. We can predict rates of coincidental detection in
Bell tests pretty accurately, but don't know what's happening
at the level of paired emissions. We can predict detection
patterns in photon/electron two-slit interference experiments,
but don't know what's happening at the level of the emissions
interacting with the two-slit and detection devices.
It's not a matter of reinventing or redefining causality or
time. There just isn't enough data.