Mathematical Undecidability in Physics

In summary, the conversation discusses the possibility of equating quantum indeterminacy with mathematical undecidability, particularly in the case of the square root of -1. However, it is argued that they are not the same and have different forms of uncertainty. The concept of mathematical undecidability is explained as a proposition that falls into an excluded middle and is logically independent of the Field Axioms. It is also discussed how the introduction of the square root of -1 in formalism of Wave Mechanics is necessary for products between vectors in an orthogonal space. The conversation concludes by highlighting the difference between the exclusion of something definite and the modeling of irreducible dichotomies in quantum mechanics.
  • #1
stevefaulkner
25
0
Do physicists know about mathematical undecidability? And do they believe it might play a part in Nature?

Foundations of The Quantum Logic:
http://steviefaulkner.wordpress.com/
 
Mathematics news on Phys.org
  • #2
stevefaulkner said:
Do physicists know about mathematical undecidability? And do they believe it might play a part in Nature?

Do I understand your idea correctly? You want to equate quantum indeterminancy with mathematical undecidability - particularly the example of the square root of -1?

On the face of it, these seem to have quite different kinds of uncertainty despite both employing a 2D number plane in their modelling.

With QM, as you zoom into pin a value to the x axis, you lose control over value in the y-axis (it could be anything out to infinity). So there is this yo-yo balance where increasing certainty in one direction leads to increasing uncertainty in the other, with Planck scale setting the ultimate limits.

But with mathematical undecidability of square root of -1, surely the 2D plane then allows complex values to be exactly specified in relation to x and y axis? So a different behaviour?
 
  • #3
Thank you for your reply apeiron,

Undecidability is not at all the same as uncertainty. I urge you to read further into my work. If you would like the full paper when it is finished, leave a comment on my blog with your email address.

SteveFaulkner.
 
  • #4
stevefaulkner said:
Undecidability is not at all the same as uncertainty. I urge you to read further into my work. If you would like the full paper when it is finished, leave a comment on my blog with your email address.

I would prefer a quick justification as - as you say - uncertainty is not undecidability.

There would be two kinds of undecidable I think. The first where you flip-flop between binary choices (trapped in self-reference as in the liar's paradox) and then second where you have asymptotic approach to a limit, so like when calculating pi or e. Trapped now in a non-completing process (but one always headed in a certain direction).

To me, QM indeterminancy is something else again. And perhaps there is not a good mathematical analogue? I would liken it to symmetry and symmetry breaking. But that does seem to give us the extra aspect of yo-yoing around a fixed point value like the Planckscale.

So why not say a few words as to how you see square root of -1 as an analog of QM indeterminancy. You may be right, but I did skim your preliminary arguments and could not spot an answer in language that I could understand.
 
  • #5
Thank you apeiron for your interest. I'll try and give a brief overview.

I see QM as an applied mathematics which is a semantic theory. I set formalism of Wave Mechanics within Mathematical Logic by making it a first-order theory [nothing to do with approximation methods].

This places the Field Axioms as axiomatic over all scalar components of all mathematical objects in the theory. Due to Soundness and Completeness, theorems of Model Theory, there is an excluded middle of propositions that are mathematically undecidable with respect to the Field Axioms. If the square root of minus one is logically independent of the Field Axioms, the proposition of this square root's existence falls into this excluded middle.

In re-writing formalism of Wave Mechanics as a first order theory, introduction of the imaginary unit can be postponed by replacing it by a bound variable until a certain step in the derivation of the theory. That point is normalisation; and the reason that the imaginary unit is needed there is that the theory requires products between vectors in an orthogonal space. In fact, it is these products that assume existence of the square root of minus one. [ Baylis, W.E., Huschilt, J. and Jiansu Wei (1991) Why i?
American Journal of Physics 1992 60/9, pp788-797 ] Baylis et.al demonstrate this for 3space but do not seem to realize it applies to infinite dimensional spaces.

Requiring the introduction of the square root's existence at this stage establishes its logical independence of the Field Axioms. The fundamental mathematical undecidability, here, is the existence of the products of orthogonal vectors, rather than existence of the imaginary unit.

Such undecidabilty is within any theory of quantum physics that relies on such products, not only Wave Mechanics.
 
  • #6
Still sounds apples and oranges to me.

Square root of -1 was an exact entity - the result of a natural operation - that was found to have been excluded from the 1D numberline. And its position was recovered when the numberline was relaxed to reveal the numberplane (so to speak).

So it was the exclusion of something definite - the definite outcome of a definite operation.

But QM is more complicated and seems quite different - apart from fact that we need at least two dimensions of measurement to begin to capture one thing.

As I say, you are performing operations in a complex plane - which is already a constraint from Hilbert infinity because we have constrained naked QM indeterminancy to a two dimensional question - where are you and when are you? And then the answers oscillate around the Planckian fixed point.

So with sqrt -1, you are expanding dimensionality to recover definite things that were excluded - and finding not just this particular point on a numberplane but the whole numberplane itself.

And with QM, you are modelling the limits of the ability to exclude middles via dimensional constraint. You are trying to bottle up duality, in effect - the complementary qualities of scale and heat (location and momentum, energy and time, etc) - and finding that imaginary numbers are necessary because the duality proves irreducible in the limit.

To sum up, a case of something mistakenly thought excluded vs a case of a dichotomy that cannot actually be collapsed?
 
  • #7
Unlike the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4,...or any rational numbers, existence of the square root of minus one cannot be proved as a theorem of the Field Axioms. Existence of every rational number can be proved as a theorem. Nevertheless, existence of the square root of minus one cannot be disproved by the the Field Axioms. Since it's existence can be neither proved nor disproved, it has undecidable existence under the Field Axioms. This does not stop it from having a definite, exact value.

Foundations of The Quantum Logic:
http://steviefaulkner.wordpress.com/

You will find that all irrational numbers are undecidable by the same logic.
 
  • #8
In our science forums, we don't accept solicitation for review of non-peer reviewed works (except in some rare cases in our independent research forum, where very specific criteria must be met), but our guidelines are not specific on philosophy submissions.

Overall, we don't wish to this site to be a vehicle for promoting personal websites, blogs, papers, and theories, so I am going to ask for consultation from the other mentors. I'll get back to you. Thanks!

Update: resolved via PM.
 
Last edited:

1. What is mathematical undecidability in physics?

Mathematical undecidability in physics is the concept that certain mathematical questions cannot be answered or proven within the context of a specific physical theory or model. This means that there are some problems or phenomena that cannot be fully explained or predicted using the current laws and equations of physics.

2. How does mathematical undecidability impact our understanding of the universe?

Mathematical undecidability challenges our belief that the universe can be fully understood and described by mathematical equations. It suggests that there may be limits to what we can know and predict about the natural world, and that there may be aspects of the universe that are fundamentally unknowable.

3. Can mathematical undecidability be proven?

No, mathematical undecidability cannot be proven. It is a concept that arises from certain mathematical problems or paradoxes that cannot be solved within a given physical theory, but it cannot be proven as an absolute truth.

4. Is mathematical undecidability a recent discovery?

No, mathematical undecidability has been a topic of study for many years. It was first introduced by mathematician Kurt Gödel in the 1930s, and has since been explored and debated by scientists and philosophers.

5. How does mathematical undecidability relate to the concept of "universality" in physics?

Universality in physics refers to the idea that certain physical laws and equations are applicable across different scales and systems. Mathematical undecidability challenges this concept by suggesting that there may be phenomena that cannot be fully described or predicted using universal laws, and that different systems may require different mathematical frameworks to be understood.

Similar threads

  • Set Theory, Logic, Probability, Statistics
Replies
26
Views
2K
  • General Math
Replies
12
Views
2K
  • Science and Math Textbooks
Replies
2
Views
322
Replies
10
Views
957
  • General Math
Replies
25
Views
3K
Replies
8
Views
1K
  • General Math
2
Replies
61
Views
9K
Replies
2
Views
820
Replies
3
Views
708
Replies
2
Views
960
Back
Top