In what sense is QM not understood ?

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In summary, some people think that quantum mechanics is "not understood" because it is a field of mathematics that deals with probabilities of measuring final states, rather than the 1 input --> 1 output style of classical mechanics. Others say that this is because the founders of QM did not understand what they were doing, and that it was a complex process that led to incorrect guesses. It seems that the best way to understand quantum mechanics is to first learn the formalism and then think about the "interpretation" of it.
  • #36


Fredrik said:
A "classical" theory is a theory that only makes predictions that can be tested without significantly disturbing the system. So maybe we shouldn't be asking why QM is so weird, but instead be asking why there are classical theories that are actually pretty good.

I think that the distinction you are making is important, but I don't see how it is the full story. It's completely understandable that if you try to measure the position of an electron using light, then you end up disturbing it and making the momentum uncertain. However, why should measuring the spin of one particle of an EPR pair disturb the spin of the other particle? As I said, it's not the fuzziness or uncertainty or nondeterminism of quantum mechanics that makes it so mysterious--it's the combination of uncertainty with very strong nonlocal correlations that makes it mysterious.

We can understand the uncertainty and nondeterminism in terms of the observer disturbing the system by his measurements. But then why would such measurements show such strong correlations, in the case of entangled particles?
 
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  • #37


Fredrik said:
Hm, you probably meant neither. Maybe you meant C) To understand the theory is to know which things in the purely mathematical part of the theory correspond to things in the real world. This is of course the part that no one understands. So if we define "understand the theory" this way, then we don't understand it. But I don't use this definition. I'm using the one I labeled "A" above.
I agree that (C) is a problematic definition, but I think that is what Bohr and Feynman meant when they said that to understand quantum mechanics requires not understanding it, or more simply, no one understands it. I think what you are saying is that Bohr and Feynman are admitting to a nonworkable version of the kind of "understanding" we should be shooting for, and I think they might have agreed with that, though Feynman always expressed some discomfort around that state of affairs (though he admitted he couldn't formulate the problem so there probably wasn't any problem!).
 
  • #38


Fredrik said:
I have come to think about this role of the observer as an essential feature of the concept of "physics". Theories of physics are falsifiable statements about reality. To be falsifiable, a statement must have testable consequences. In other words, we must be able to use it to make predictions about results of measurements. And what is a measurement? It's an interaction between the system and its environment that puts some part of the environment into one of several states that a human observer can interpret as a result of the measurement. Such a state must last long enough for a human to observe it, and be distinguishable from states that correspond to other results. So that part of the environment, the "pointer" that indicates the result, has to behave in a way that will be perceived as classical.

A "classical" theory is a theory that only makes predictions that can be tested without significantly disturbing the system. So maybe we shouldn't be asking why QM is so weird, but instead be asking why there are classical theories that are actually pretty good.
I agree 100% with everything you just said, so lucidly.
 
  • #39


krd said:
Who says we're not supposed to?

We have to keep asking questions - reformulating things.
I agree. And I'm suggesting just such a questioning, and reformulation: I'm suggesting that we should question whether or not we should be looking for a description of nature that has us explicitly in it, and in doubting that, we should reformulate physics in the way Bohr referred: to be a study of that which we can say about nature, and nothing more. But there's a "hitch" in that prescription, which is, we are not attempting to account for why we can say that about nature, for that is doing more than simply being what we can say about nature, that's being what we can say about what we can say about nature. The reformulation is not a capitulation to the unknown, it is a lever with which to gain purchase over the unknown-- but it comes at a price. That seems like a standard kind of "bargain" that we accept in physics all the time-- it's the kind of approach that gave us those mobile phones.
 
  • #40


Upon my writing that "Keppler complained that he did not understand it. Later Newton's theory of gravitation gave a first feeling of understanding of the "why" [..] due to identifying a physical cause to which those equations relate":
Fredrik said:
[..] Newton's theory is a better theory, because it makes more accurate predictions about a wider range of phenomena.
Newton's theory explains why the simple theory works, but it raises a whole new set of "why?" questions. This illustrates another important idea: that the only thing that can explain why a theory works, is a better theory.
Not necessarily a better theory is required in the sense of making more accurate predictions; in the above example, Newton's theory first of all satisfied the question of "why" Kepplers ellipses. A correct and understandable interpretation of existing equations (without making more accurate predictions) would already satisfy the "why" to the point that most of us would expect (or desire) from a theory.

stevendaryl said:
[..] why should measuring the spin of one particle of an EPR pair disturb the spin of the other particle? [..] why would such measurements show such strong correlations, in the case of entangled particles?
Yes, I think that such questions hit the nail on the head.
 
  • #41


stevendaryl said:
However, why should measuring the spin of one particle of an EPR pair disturb the spin of the other particle? As I said, it's not the fuzziness or uncertainty or nondeterminism of quantum mechanics that makes it so mysterious--it's the combination of uncertainty with very strong nonlocal correlations that makes it mysterious.

Does a comment like above not add to that confusion?

Please correct me, I understand one particle does not "disturb" the other & that the "non-local" correlation is moot. There is no "connection" between the two, outside of their origin. What's odd is the probability is "transferred", or more reasonably; a "law" of nature regarding uncertainty seems "more proven".

Maybe I'm hung on the use of those words you chose, but the choice of words seems to imply what is often said to be the most confusing part of basic QM concepts.
 
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  • #42


Well this has been an interesting read so far, and so many responses in such a short time. It just dawned on me what an awesome learning resource this site is. You people are all contributing to something unprecedented here, so much physics knowledge being shared all in one place on demand.
 
  • #43


nitsuj said:
Does a comment like above not add to that confusion?

I'm not suggesting that EPR-type correlations can be explained in terms of disturbance---just the opposite; I'm saying that it doesn't make sense to describe them that way. That's my point, the strangeness of quantum mechanics is not just due to nondeterminism, and it's not just due to "the observer affecting that which is being observed".

Please correct me, I understand one particle does not "disturb" the other & that the "non-local" correlation is moot. There is no "connection" between the two, outside of their origin.

That's the idea behind local hidden variables: Because the two particles share a common origin, they subsequently share state information, and so what happens to the two particles later on is naturally correlated. That's perfectly understandable. But it's wrong. You can't (at least not in a way that makes intuitive sense to most people) explain EPR-type that way: the correlations predicted by quantum mechanics are just different from what would be predicted based on the two particles sharing a common origin. That's what Bell's theorem shows.

What's odd is the probability is "transferred", or more reasonably; a "law" of nature regarding uncertainty seems "more proven".

I'm not sure I understand what you mean by that.
 
  • #44


stevendaryl said:
I would say that it is not just because it is nondeterministic that people say they don't understand quantum mechanics. It's the combination of nondeterminism together with extremely strong correlations that is hard to understand.

In an EPR experiment, you produce a twin pair of spin-1/2 particles. Alice measures the spin of one particle along some axis, and gets +1/2 or -1/2. Bob measures the spin of the other particle along a different axis, and gets +1/2 or -1/2.

The fact that Alice's result is nondeterministic is not hard to understand. But the fact that, in the case where Alice and Bob choose the same axis, they always get opposite result, is hard to understand. If Alice knew what axis Bob was going to choose, and Alice did her measurement a second before Bob, then she would know exactly what result Bob would get. So in that situation, from her point of view, Bob's result isn't nondeterministic--it's completely predictable.

It's the combination of perfect nondeterminism and perfect correlations that is hard to understand about quantum mechanics.

correct
 
  • #45


To me, it is the sheer size of the Hilbert space that blows the mind. Spin directions of N billiard balls can be fully described by 2N numbers (2 for each ball). Spin of N electrons requires 2N numbers! For instance, simulating a handful of qubits would severily strain resources of a modern PC. 100 qubits is out of the question. The numbers quickly grow beyond anything physics has ever dealt with. The only hope seems to be some sort of overriding cosmic holographic principle, as in Total Perspective Vortex:
Douglas Adams said:
To explain - since every piece of matter in the Universe is in some way affected by every other piece of matter in the Universe, it is in theory possible to extrapolate the whole of creation - every sun, every planet, their orbits, their composition and their economic and social history from, say, one small piece of fairy cake.
 
  • #46


stevendaryl said:
"What's odd is the probability is "transferred", or more reasonably; a "law" of nature regarding uncertainty seems "more proven"."

I'm not sure I understand what you mean by that.

Entanglement for me, shows that "probability" in this context is "embedded" in nature, is isotropic through out spacetime. i.e. not a result of us guessing a probability.
 
  • #47


stevendaryl said:
I'm not suggesting that EPR-type correlations can be explained in terms of disturbance---just the opposite; I'm saying that it doesn't make sense to describe them that way. That's my point, the strangeness of quantum mechanics is not just due to nondeterminism, and it's not just due to "the observer affecting that which is being observed".
The strangeness of entanglement does seem rather different from the strangeness of the measurement problem, but I think there's a way to look at it where they are actually a similar issue. We merely need to think of the identity of a particle as something that is established by observation. Then, indistinguishability gets "collapsed" in a way that is similarly strange as whatever other measurement is being done.
You can't (at least not in a way that makes intuitive sense to most people) explain EPR-type that way: the correlations predicted by quantum mechanics are just different from what would be predicted based on the two particles sharing a common origin. That's what Bell's theorem shows.
Actually, it's fine to attribute the correlations to the common origin, indeed that is far superior (in my view) to any concept of "instantaneous effects" between the particles. What Bell's theorem says is that the ramifications of the common origin cannot be expressed in terms of a "locally real" picture, where each particle "carries with it" all the information you need to correlate the measurements.
 
  • #48


Ken G said:
The strangeness of entanglement does seem rather different from the strangeness of the measurement problem, but I think there's a way to look at it where they are actually a similar issue. We merely need to think of the identity of a particle as something that is established by observation. Then, indistinguishability gets "collapsed" in a way that is similarly strange as whatever other measurement is being done.

There are two different, but related, ideas about the effect of measurement on the system. The first is the notion that the act of measurement affects the thing being measured. That is potentially true classically, as well as quantum-mechanically. Shining a light on an object to see it better can end up changing the object's properties. I don't think that's a hard-to-understand concept. It makes interpreting experiments more complicated, but conceptually I don't think it's too weird.

With the "disturbance" model of the uncertainty principle, we can consistently believe that an electron has both a position and momentum at every moment, but that attempts to measure one ends up changing the other in an uncontrollable way. But, as I said, that disturbance model of uncertainty does not explain why distant measurements (in the case of EPR-type experiments) should be correlated.

The second notion of measurement affecting the system is the idea that a system doesn't have a property until that property is measured. That's very different, and much weirder.
 
  • #49


To me, the problem with understanding QM doesn't lie in QM itself, but instead lies in the fact that most physicists are human, and humans are for the most part, idiots. Ergo, so-called physicists, (those who speak as if they understand QM, but in actuality don't have a clue) seem to view it as some vastly complex and mysterious phenomena, beyond the comprehension of most mere mortals. Relegated to the realm of mathematics, and probabilities. Understandable only to those few with sufficient education and insight to grasp such things, to which I say bull***t. I believe that QM, and nature in its essence, will prove to be inspiringly simple and elegant at its core. QM, which if truly understood, would appear so simple, that even a child could understand it, is not the mystery that physicists make it out to be. Someday children will marvel at our ignorance of QM, the same way that children nowadays view those who used to think that the Earth was the center of the universe. How could men have been so deluded and ignorant. Of course back then I'm sure that the discovery of objects moving backwards in the heavens, and celestial bodies orbiting other bodies seemed pretty mysterious too. Most things are when you don't understand them.

That said, I too am ignorant, I do not know what the answer is, but I know that it is simple. In my ignorance I attempt to envision a world in which such seeming mysteries, as entanglement and wave particle dualities, can be explained without the need for mysteriously vague concepts like "probabilities".

Imagine a one dimensional string. Waves can move along this string in some form. Now let's coil the string to form a sheet. Likewise let's allow waves to move across the sheet. Now let's take our sheet and roll it up into a three dimensional string, and again let's allow waves to move along this string. Now what would a wave moving along our three dimensional string look like to someone on the rolled up two dimensional sheet? What would a wave moving across our two dimensional sheet look like to someone on our three dimensional string? Let's not stop there, let's take multiple strings, and multiple sheets. What happens then?

There are a myriad ways to fold, roll, and entangle the ten, eleven, or whatever number of dimensions there ultimately are, to produce effects which may seem incomprehensible when viewed from only one or two dimensions, but when viewed as a whole, are not nearly as mysterious, even if they are difficult to model. M-theory with its membranes is only the beginning of what promises to be a glorious journey of discovery. But one which will someday seem as simplistic as our sun centered solar system model seems to us today.

So if you cannot explain the world of QM in layman's terms, it's because you don't really understand it. Forget the frigging math. Envision first, model second. Think outside the box. Be visionary, not dogmatic. It's not what you know that matters... it's what you know, that isn't so.

Nature, is at its core, elegant, simple, and beautiful. If it seems complicated and mysterious, it is only because you fail to understand it.
 
  • #50


Fiziqs said:
To me, the problem with understanding QM doesn't lie in QM itself, but instead lies in the fact that most physicists are human, and humans are for the most part, idiots. Ergo, so-called physicists, (those who speak as if they understand QM, but in actuality don't have a clue) seem to view it as some vastly complex and mysterious phenomena, beyond the comprehension of most mere mortals

...

Nature, is at its core, elegant, simple, and beautiful. If it seems complicated and mysterious, it is only because you fail to understand it.

So you're saying that people find quantum mechanics mysterious because they don't understand it. Well, yeah.
 
  • #51


stevendaryl said:
So you're saying that people find quantum mechanics mysterious because they don't understand it. Well, yeah.

That's exactly what I'm saying. As opposed to the idea that QM is inherently mysterious, and no amount of "understanding" will change that. This thread, if I understand its premise, is that there is among lay persons the false notion that physicists don't understand QM.

I don't believe this notion is misguided. I believe that indeed physicists don't understand QM. The mysteriousness of QM is not due to the fundamental properties of nature, but is instead a fundamental property of ignorance.
 
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  • #52


Fiziqs said:
That's exactly what I'm saying. As opposed to the idea that QM is inherently mysterious, and no amount of "understanding" will change that.

"Mysterious" just means the same thing as "not understood", doesn't it?
 
  • #53


Fiziqs said:
Nature, is at its core, elegant, simple, and beautiful. If it seems complicated and mysterious, it is only because you fail to understand it.
I agree that nature is simple, elegant and beautiful, but I disagree that QM is not. From my brief exposure to QM, QFT and higher mathematics I think that the most elegant, beautiful and simple ideas cannot be explained in lay terms.
 
  • #54


Fiziqs said:
[..] This thread, if I understand its premise, is that there is among lay persons the false notion that physicists don't understand QM [..].
Surely you're mistaken! This thread is about the fact that physicists admit that they don't (or not really) understand QM. It refers to for example the following sayings by Richard Feynman:

"I think that I can safely say that no one understands Quantum Mechanics. "
-The Character of Physical Law

"You see my physics students don't understand it. ... That is because I don't understand it. Nobody does."
-QED
 
  • #55


Doofy said:
Is it just the fact that QM deals with probabilities of measuring final states rather than the 1 input --> 1 output style of classical mechanics that makes people say it's "not understood" ?
This is a fundamental problem, on the one hand you have fundamental 'particles' that have no internal structure, yet they show deterministic properties when measured as an ensemble(classical behavior). When in combination with other fundamental 'particles'(which also lack internal structure) they can form beautiful, meaningful compounds that act in completely novel ways. This behavior seems unreal and out of this world. How could this be? What/who guides this process towards classicality? One could dive into holism and argue that reality is greater than the sum of its parts or remain agnostic and choose to adopt a more modest goal.

Is "not understood" just another way of saying "not familiar in terms of everyday human experience" ?
It's worse. It's impossible to say what qm is describing and if it's describing an outside world at all. It's also impossible to unambiguously state what the world is made out of. One can at best list all the 'particles' from the Standard Model and their interactions but they are just observed behavior(represented by their quantum numbers). People have trouble relating to the outside world as being made out of observed behavior.
 
  • #56


stevendaryl said:
I'm not suggesting that EPR-type correlations can be explained in terms of disturbance---just the opposite; I'm saying that it doesn't make sense to describe them that way. That's my point, the strangeness of quantum mechanics is not just due to nondeterminism, and it's not just due to "the observer affecting that which is being observed".
That's the idea behind local hidden variables:
Because the two particles share a common origin, they subsequently share state information, and so what happens to the two particles later on is naturally correlated.
That's perfectly understandable. But it's wrong. You can't (at least not in a way that makes intuitive sense to most people) explain EPR-type that way: the correlations predicted by quantum mechanics are just different from what would be predicted based on the two particles sharing a common origin. That's what Bell's theorem shows.

i wish to ask steven, if
quoting you:
"and so what happens to the two particles later on is naturally correlated"
ok, for a pair of electrons (of course, sharing a common origin) if you observes one a counterclockwise, then the other is clockwise.
then, in a second state to the same electrons, if you change one of the electron spin, say, the clockwise to counterclokwise, the other change to clockwise ? there is an experiment showing that ?

i ask only for a pair of electrons.

.
 
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  • #57


Fiziqs said:
That's exactly what I'm saying. As opposed to the idea that QM is inherently mysterious, and no amount of "understanding" will change that. This thread, if I understand its premise, is that there is among lay persons the false notion that physicists don't understand QM.

I don't believe this notion is misguided. I believe that indeed physicists don't understand QM. The mysteriousness of QM is not due to the fundamental properties of nature, but is instead a fundamental property of ignorance.

Can you clarify the distinction you're mentioning? It seems you are also suggesting "physicists" are mysterious in their approach to "understanding" QM.

To stevendaryl's point "Mysterious" just means the same thing as "not understood", doesn't it?
 
  • #58


yoda jedi said:
ok, for a pair of electrons (of course, sharing a common origin) if you observes one a counterclockwise, then the other is clockwise.
the, in a second state to the same electrons, if you change one of the electron spin, say, the clockwise to counterclokwise, the other change to clockwise ? there is an experiment showing that ?.

Simple. There's no way to change the first one's spin without changing the angular momentum of the thing that changes the electron's spin, by Conservation of Angular Momentum.
 
  • #59


Whovian said:
Simple. There's no way to change the first one's spin without changing the angular momentum of the thing that changes the electron's spin, by Conservation of Angular Momentum.
which thing ? that angular momentum is irrelevant to the state of the other electron spin.
 
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  • #60


i know of experiments that control the spin of a single electron, but not for one of a pair (common origin).
but I don't see the impossibility of making the experiment.
 
  • #61


Quantum Mechanics is an engineering tool. It has specific applications only. It is not an ontology (an explanation of reality).

As an ontology, QM is provably false. Physicists in general are demonstrably poor philosophers (thus the sense that QM is not understood). The mysticism comes in only because of the temptation to extrapolate every single bit of empirical evidence into a universal "theory of everything" (a God-wannabe).

If you want to explain all of reality with physics, you merely need classical physics polished up by an actual philosopher familiar with rationality and logic.
 
  • #62


harrylin said:
"I think that I can safely say that no one understands Quantum Mechanics. "
-The Character of Physical Law

"You see my physics students don't understand it. ... That is because I don't understand it. Nobody does."
-QED

I think, in quotes like these, by Quantum Mechanics he means the Quantum World not the science. Surely he understands quantum mechanics, what he doesn't understand is how reality can be like that.
 
  • #63


James S Saint said:
If you want to explain all of reality with physics, you merely need classical physics polished up by an actual philosopher familiar with rationality and logic.
QM is useful precisely in those situations where classical physics can be proved wrong. So you certainly can't explain all of reality with classical physics.
 
  • #64


Fiziqs said:
I believe that QM, and nature in its essence, will prove to be inspiringly simple and elegant at its core. QM, which if truly understood, would appear so simple, that even a child could understand it, is not the mystery that physicists make it out to be. Someday children will marvel at our ignorance of QM, the same way that children nowadays view those who used to think that the Earth was the center of the universe. How could men have been so deluded and ignorant. Of course back then I'm sure that the discovery of objects moving backwards in the heavens, and celestial bodies orbiting other bodies seemed pretty mysterious too. Most things are when you don't understand them.

That said, I too am ignorant, I do not know what the answer is, but I know that it is simple.
The only way you could know that is if you have found a simple and intuitive theory that makes better predictions than QM, or at least explains why QM's predictions are so accurate.

Fiziqs said:
Nature, is at its core, elegant, simple, and beautiful. If it seems complicated and mysterious, it is only because you fail to understand it.
This might be true, but we could still be too dumb to guess what that elegant simple core is. Even if someone comes up with the right idea, we could still be too dumb to figure out how this idea explains the world as we know it.
 
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  • #65


martinbn said:
I think, in quotes like these, by Quantum Mechanics he means the Quantum World not the science. Surely he understands quantum mechanics, what he doesn't understand is how reality can be like that.
Although there is no universal agreement on this, commonly an idea of what really happens is supposed to be included in "the science"*. However, as Feynman explained, he had no idea what really happens - and neither do we, at least not concerning the tricky aspects of QM that were mentioned in this thread. In that way even experts don't understand QM. Of course, it's possible that someone does, but didn't manage to explain it well enough to others.

*compare: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/science?s=t
 
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  • #66


James S Saint said:
Quantum Mechanics is an engineering tool. It has specific applications only. It is not an ontology (an explanation of reality).
Do you think that ontologies have specific applications? So why the insertion of the inappropriate word "only?"
As an ontology, QM is provably false.
You seem to be confused about two things: physics and logic. I alluded above to your confusion about physics, so now let's address logic. In logic, a "proof" is a tautological connection between a set of axioms or postulates, and a conclusion about what they imply. Hence, no one can ever "prove" anything false, until they assert what choice of axioms they are using. If one chooses the postulates of quantum mechanics only, it is well known that these postulates are not contradictory, so quantum mechanics cannot be proven false within only itself. It is also known that the postulates are incomplete-- the postulate of unitarity and the Born rule require some additional structure to connect (and the interpretations of quantum mechanics provide that connection in various ways).

But incomplete is not the same thing as inconsistent, so to make your assertion, you must be appending axioms that are not actually part of quantum mechanics. What are those axioms you have appended? Unless you identify them, your statement is meaningless. And when you do append them, the people here can reject your additions (and probably would, frankly).

Physicists in general are demonstrably poor philosophers (thus the sense that QM is not understood).
Many philosophers are demonstrably poor physicists, but most are at least good logicians. You need to fix up your argument.
The mysticism comes in only because of the temptation to extrapolate every single bit of empirical evidence into a universal "theory of everything" (a God-wannabe).
That is a false claim, again the logic is poor. Many physicists don't attempt that, and don't even believe it is possible, yet find no issue with quantum mechanics other than that it is hard to understand how it accounts for reality.

If you want to explain all of reality with physics, you merely need classical physics polished up by an actual philosopher familiar with rationality and logic.
The disproof of that was given by Fredrik. Overall, I'd say your logic is full of holes-- neither a physicist nor a philosopher has any reason to accept it.
 
  • #67


Fredrik said:
Fiziqs said:
Nature, is at its core, elegant, simple, and beautiful. If it seems complicated and mysterious, it is only because you fail to understand it.
This might be true, but we could still be too dumb to guess what that elegant simple core is. Even if someone comes up with the right idea, we could still be too dumb to figure out how this idea explains the world as we know it.


Ah, this is so true. But in spite of humanity's many shortcomings, they can be a very ingenious lot. Given sufficient time, I have faith that they will find the answers. It's the mysteries that make life worth living, and science worth pursuing. And it's the perseverance in the face of the odds, that makes the quest so noble.
 
  • #68


Ken G said:
Do you think that ontologies have specific applications?
The intent of an ontology is to be a universal construct of all reality. A different construct can be made with different concepts equally useful or even more useful than another. But each true ontology must be able to explain all fundamental events. Some constructs would merely be easier than others, much like a Laplace transformation and back.

Ken G said:
In logic, a "proof" is a tautological connection between a set of axioms or postulates, and a conclusion about what they imply. Hence, no one can ever "prove" anything false, until they assert what choice of axioms they are using.
True.
Ken G said:
If one chooses the postulates of quantum mechanics only, it is well known that these postulates are not contradictory, so quantum mechanics cannot be proven false within only itself.
Oh but it can.
Realize that "well known" once meant the flatness of the Earth.
Even I can use the axioms of QM to prove that it isn't a valid ontology.
It doesn't take a genius.

Ken G said:
It is also known that the postulates are incomplete-- the postulate of unitarity and the Born rule require some additional structure to connect (and the interpretations of quantum mechanics provide that connection in various ways).
Yes, "connection" is necessary else you have "incompleteness".
But exactly how to connect what, is something that QM proponents don't seem to understand.

Ken G said:
But incomplete is not the same thing as inconsistent, so to make your assertion, you must be appending axioms that are not actually part of quantum mechanics.
An ontology is complete. As stated before, any isolated system, although totally consistent, must be connected to something in order to gain completeness and thus become a potential ontology.

Ken G said:
What are those axioms you have appended?
In the case of QM, I didn't need to add any axioms.

Ken G said:
Unless you identify them, your statement is meaningless. And when you do append them, the people here can reject your additions (and probably would, frankly).
I merely didn't want to start an argument of pride an prejudice.
But if you are interested in examining the issue far more seriously, find the right forum to do it and I will gladly engage. I, like Einstein, don't really like messing up Science with mentalism.

Ken G said:
Many philosophers are demonstrably poor physicists, but most are at least good logicians. You need to fix up your argument.
Emm.. case in point...
.. I didn't present an argument. I merely made an assertion. A "good logician/philosopher" would know that.

So I wouldn't be so carefree with the idea of who is a "good logician" just yet.

Ken G said:
Many physicists don't attempt that, and don't even believe it is possible, yet find no issue with quantum mechanics other than that it is hard to understand how it accounts for reality.
I have no objection at all to those who do not attempt that. I admire those. They stick to their job and don't get into other people's realm of authority so publicly. But public speakers such as Michio Kaku, are attempting to influence society with the notion that QM explains the universe entirely.

Those professing the Big Bang and also of QM are WAY out of their league.

Ken G said:
Overall, I'd say your logic is full of holes-- neither a physicist nor a philosopher has any reason to accept it.
I would say, since I gave no "logic", but merely stated a few facts, that your assessment is "full of holes". Don't critique my logic until you have actually seen it, please.
.. no offense.
 
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  • #69


James S Saint said:
The intent of an ontology is to be a universal construct of all reality.
That may be the goal of an ontology, to a philosopher, but I would point out two facts:
1) no ontology in the history of philosophy has ever succeeded at that in any kind of widely accepted way, and
2) physicists use ontologies in a much more demonstrably beneficial way-- they use them simply to help them picture a particular theory, with no requirement that the ontology correspond directly to the real world, nor any requirement that the ontology be unique, even in regard to a single theory.
But each true ontology must be able to explain all fundamental events.
Yet that is a demonstrably unreachable standard for an ontology. Physicists are generally more practical, so have only the above objectives for their ontologies (if they are honest to themselves, that is).
Even I can use the axioms of QM to prove that it isn't a valid ontology.
I note you have changed from "false" (which means, contradicts its axioms), to "not valid" (which means, presumably, fails to meet your standard of what an ontology should be). But I already pointed out that your standard has never been met by anything, and is not the one physicists use, so is not terribly relevant.
But exactly how to connect what, is something that QM proponents don't seem to understand.
You may be confused about what is required to be a "proponent" of a physical theory. It sounds like you believe that the proponent of a physics theory uses rhetoric, like a proponent of a philosophical stance would, so can be dissuaded by more rhetoric. This is not actually the case-- "proponents" of physics theories base their support on agreement with observation. Hence, to dissuade their support of quantum mechanics, you would need to give them an observation that quantum mechanics fails to describe. That has not been done. It is known that quantum mechanics does not provide a complete understanding of all physical phenomena that we could hypothetically imagine, so we say it is incomplete, but so is every physics theory from time immemorial-- that is not a problem for physics theories.
An ontology is complete.
Name one.
But if you are interested in examining the issue far more seriously, find the right forum to do it and I will gladly engage. I, like Einstein, don't really like messing up Science with mentalism.
You would need to convince me that your entire argument will not simply hinge on an impossible standard for an ontology, that no other ontology has ever met, which is then being used to criticize quantum mechanics for not meeting that same impossible standard. Not a very fruitful avenue.
.. I didn't present an argument. I merely made an assertion. A "good logician/philosopher" would know that.
Actually, a good logician/philosopher knows that any assertion is itself an argument-- it is an argument that the assertion is correct. I pointed out why the assertion is incorrect. That you provided no specifics to the argument is irrelevant-- the assertion itself is incorrect. I was being generous to call it an argument-- not inaccurate.
But public speakers such as Michio Kaku, are attempting to influence society with the notion that QM explains the universe entirely.
Your objections to Michio Kaku have nothing to do with the flaws in the assertions you made that I pointed out. I'm sure you would find many physicists who agree that Kaku is running a bit fast and loose with the demonstrable facts at our disposal, that is a very separate issue. Perhaps you are falling victim to the fallacy of thinking that anything Kaku says represents the consensus conclusions of the body of physics as a whole?
Those professing the Big Bang and also of QM are WAY out of their league.
I might have known-- you are a Big Bang denier. This merely confirms my suspicions that you really don't understand science at all.
Don't critique my logic until you have actually seen it, please.
Again, I disproved your assertions themselves, it doesn't matter what your logic is when a logical argument can demonstrate that your conclusions are false.
 
  • #70


You have made so many logic errors in that last post, I can see that this would take a seriously long debate to get your story straight. But is this the right forum and thread to be correcting your misunderstandings of logic and ontology?

One issue with which you can begin is the following definition of an "argument";
argument [′är·gyə·mənt]
1. Logic
a. a process of deductive or inductive reasoning that purports to show its conclusion to be true
b. formally, a sequence of statements one of which is the conclusion and the remainder the premises
2. Logic an obsolete name for the middle term of a syllogism
Can you point out what syllogism or deductive reasoning that I proposed?

No. An assertion is NOT an argument of truth.
You are demonstrating how physicists (presuming you to be one) really are not qualified to debate logic or philosophical issues. And by the way, I suspect that you are not aware of the tight association between a philosopher and logic;
phi·los·o·phy (f-ls-f)
n. pl. phi·los·o·phies
1. Love and pursuit of wisdom by intellectual means and moral self-discipline.
2. Investigation of the nature, causes, or principles of reality, knowledge, or values, based on logical reasoning rather than empirical methods.
3. A system of thought based on or involving such inquiry: the philosophy of Hume.
4. The critical analysis of fundamental assumptions or beliefs.
5. The disciplines presented in university curriculums of science and the liberal arts, except medicine, law, and theology.
6. The discipline comprising logic, ethics, aesthetics, metaphysics, and epistemology.
Note that physics is a separate entity entirely, expressly excluded.

As far as "name one";
The idea that no ontology has ever been good or complete is hardly justification for saying that QM is a good ontology.
ontology [ɒnˈtɒlədʒɪ]
philosophical inquiry into the nature of being itself, a branch of metaphysics.

So to name merely one (despite the many proposed over the centuries);
Rational Metaphysics.

To address the difference in QM and RM merely as example; QM accepts that positive attracts negative and visa versa as fundamental whereas RM explains exactly why they do. The same can be said of all of the other fundamentals of contemporary physics.

But of course, you are not familiar with RM and don't believe any of the others proposed throughout history, so you default to "well, since they didn't get it right, I don't have to get it right either."

But then, that gets back to the topic of this thread, "In THAT sense QM is 'not understood'"
 

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