I see… I think I’m gonna lock the thread here since that’s probably the case. An “observer” is kind of an undefined thing where it can vary from person to person, so I suppose I had a wrong understanding on what it is. Still, thanks a lot for explaining all of this to me!
Best regards,
Seph...
The link is below this thread!
Since you said about textbooks, do you have any recommendations I can read as a beginner? It would be really helpful.
Best Regards,
Seph :)
Youtube video
I think we have different definitions of “observers.” What I mean of an observer is a physical system that can conduct an “observation”, or rather an interaction that causes quantum to turn from uncertainty to a physical state. Hopefully this clears things up, and please elaborate so that i can...
Disclaimer: I’m new to QM, so things I say might be wrong, please forgive me for possible inaccurate info.
So as for what I know, quantum gravity is the study of merging GR and QM on gravity.
Here’s a few questions I’m interested about on the quantisation of gravity:
String theory
1. What is a...
I don’t think your definition of “observer” is same as mine, but you do have a point.
Also I’m gonna open a new thread soon :D
Have fun studying QM!
(very) Best regards,
Seph :D
Thanks for everyone’s replies! (Still gonna keep this thread open cause it seems like there can still be more to it)
Just to clear the question up:
Yes, I did consider “observers” as to be any physical system that can cause interactions.
But to sum it up for what i’ve seen (which may or may...
no, i mean with 0 ways of measuring, conscious or non-conscious. no robots, human, animals, plants type of stuff.
cause that way the entire world should be in uncertainty or smth
I’m new to quantum physics, and I probably don’t understand a lot of things. But there is one question I wanted to ask:
What would happen if there were no observers? Nothing that could measure?
(Edit) After doing a little bit of digging, apparently a thing doesn’t need to be observed to exist...