I Quantum mechanics is not weird, unless presented as such

Click For Summary
Quantum mechanics is often perceived as "weird," a notion that some argue hinders true understanding, particularly for students. Critics of this characterization suggest that quantum mechanics can be derived from reasonable assumptions without invoking measurement devices, which they claim is essential for a valid derivation. The discussion highlights the inadequacy of certain interpretations, like the ensemble interpretation, which relies on observations that may not have existed in the early universe. Participants emphasize the need for clearer explanations of quantum mechanics that bridge the gap between complex theories and public understanding. Ultimately, while quantum mechanics may seem strange, especially to laypersons, it can be presented in a way that aligns more closely with classical mechanics.
  • #241
dextercioby said:
Quantum mechanics will always be perceived
What has been the case in the past need not be so in the future. In the past, the perception of many fields of physics hasn't been invariant in time, and what holds for the past is likely to hold for the future.
dextercioby said:
Think of the free quantum (Galilean) moving massive dot.
In a future where quantum mechanics is interpreted in terms of fields, the free point particle will be viewed as a very idealized toy example illustrating certain features of quantum mechanics. Not more.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #242
strangerep said:
the case for a quantum field picture of the world
But this case is made (informally) here in this thread, not in my book.

My book has a far more modest goal - to show how close quantum mechanics can be to classical mechanics (both formally and in its interpretation) without losing the slightest substance of the quantum description, but removing much (not all) of its weirdness. (I am planning another book, on quantum field theory, but this is not yet ready for discussion.)
 
  • #243
A. Neumaier said:
Physical existence is having a density in space-time. This density tells the spatial-temporal extent of the object. In quantum mechanics the density is encoded in the density matrix.
Density of...? Would you say that physical existence, ontologically, is an expression of spatial-temporal information?
 
  • #244
Feeble Wonk said:
Density of...?
Density of mass, energy, charge, or more complicated stuff. It is all encoded in the density matrix characterizing a physical state.
Feeble Wonk said:
Would you say that physical existence, ontologically, is an expression of spatial-temporal information?
No. But without an expression of spatial-temporal information nothing can exist in any physically meaningful sense.
(Diverse other sorts of ontological existence that entities such as ''the theorem of Pythagoras'', ''the hero of the book The Lord of the Rings'', or ''the current emperor of Rome'' may have are not warranted in our context.)
 
Last edited:
  • #245
A. Neumaier said:
(Diverse other sorts of ontological existence that entities such as ''the theorem of Pythagoras'', ''the hero of the book The Lord of the Rings'', or ''the current emperor of Rome'' may have are not warranted in our context.)

I'm sorry to be dull, but I don't understand what this means.
 
  • #246
A. Neumaier said:
Suppose that I can convince you that your scenario (without any later change to the setting), once all hidden features implies by the use of classical language, is not significantly more weird than a similar classical situation. Would you then agree that I have explained quantum weirdness in a satisfactory way?
I'm not stevendaryl and I'm not sure if it matter but I say yes to your question with one correction to stevendaryl's explanation: statistics in point 5. are given for 3 settings case (as in picture).
 
  • #247
Feeble Wonk said:
I don't understand what this means.
Well, ontology is the theory of existence. To clarify which sort of existence I am talking about I gave four examples of entities that may be considered to exist in some sense (how could we talk about things that don't exist in any sense?) but where the concept of existence is not the one appropriate for physics.
 
Last edited:
  • #248
A. Neumaier said:
Well, ontology is the theory of existence, and I gave four examples of entities that may be considered to exist in some sense (how could we talk about things that don't exist in any sense?) but where the concept of existence is not that of physics.
I see. I suppose my question was more in regard to the physical ontology. In the absence of "material" existence, we are left with your description of a quantum field imbuing all of space-time with "mass, energy, charge, or more complicated stuff" as you said, which is "all encoded in the density matrix characterizing a physical state"... which is a probabilistic expression. It leaves me unclear as to the physical ontology other than its information content.
But, I won't press the issue. I suspect it leads to metaphysical/philosophical discussion that will get the thread closed.
I'm simply pointing out that to those that expect the mathematical description to be describing something ontologically "real", in a physical sense, this seems "weird".
 
  • #249
Feeble Wonk said:
"all encoded in the density matrix characterizing a physical state"... which is a probabilistic expression.
No. For a 2-level system, the density matrix is a matrix expressible in terms of four definite real numbers, which is not so different from a classical phase space position that takes 6 real numbers for its description. There are are also classical observables with matrix shape, such as the inertia tensor of a rigid body. The density matrix is analogous.

For more complex quantum systems, the number of definite real numbers needed to fix the state is bigger (or even infinite), but this is also the case in classical complex objects or fields. Thus the ontology of physical reality is as real as one can have it in a formal model of reality.

Response probabilities can be determined from the density matrix, but one can also determine response probabilities from classical chaotic systems. This therefore has nothing to do with the underlying ontology.
 
  • #250
Feeble Wonk said:
In the absence of "material" existence
Why is material existence absent when there is a mass density? Classically, in classical elasticity theory (which governs the behavior of all solids of our ordinary experience) and hydrodynamics (which governs the behavior of all liquids and gases of our ordinary experience), all you have about material existence is the mass density - unless you go into the microscopic domain where classical descriptions are not applicable.
 
Last edited:
  • #251
zonde said:
I'm not stevendaryl and I'm not sure if it matter but I say yes to your question with one correction to stevendaryl's explanation: statistics in point 5. are given for 3 settings case (as in picture).

@Neumaier: I would answer yes too, if you assume Alice and Bob's experimental regions are spacelike separated. Steveandaryl is implicitly assuming that I think, but I wouldn't want to disappoint after your attempt if you assumed timelike instead.
 
  • #252
A. Neumaier said:
Why is material existence absent when there is a mass density? Classically, in classical elasticity theory (which governs the behavior of all solids of our ordinary experience) and hydrodynamics (which governs the behavior of all liquids and gases of our ordinary experience), all you have about material existence is the mass density - unless you go into the microscopic domain where classical descriptions are not applicable.

Thanks for expanding on this. Let me chew on this for a bit. My classical intuition tends to equate material with solid, and solid with particle existence. I think I've got to change that way of thinking about things.

Let me ask another question for now though. Earlier in your thread, you differentiated between quantum information theory and quantum field theory, but I can't find the post at the moment. In your view, is there a fundamental difference between these to schools of thought that is easily explained. (Hopefully something more enlightening than one refers to information and the other refers to fields. )
 
  • #253
Feeble Wonk said:
is there a fundamental difference between these to schools of thought that is easily explained.
In quantum information theory - in sharp contrast to quantum field theory -, all Hilbert spaces are finite dimensional, all spectra discrete, thee is no scattering, and canonical commutation rules are absent. No functional analysis is needed to understand it.
 
Last edited:
  • #254
A. Neumaier said:
Those who want to see that quantum mechanics is not at all weird (when presented in the right way) but very close to classical mechanics should read instead my online book Classical and Quantum Mechanics via Lie algebras. (At least I tried to ensure that nothing weird entered the book.)

I am as layman as layman can get, but I got a hunch the other day that classical- and quantummechanics are in some basic way(s) similar. However, I'll keep it with that hunch. I hope though you have a point there! :wink: :woot:
 
  • #255
A. Neumaier said:
My book has a far more modest goal - to show how close quantum mechanics can be to classical mechanics
I guess you mean classical, nonrelativistic mechanics?

(both formally and in its interpretation) without losing the slightest substance of the quantum description, but removing much (not all) of its weirdness.
The perceived weirdness in the nonrelativistic case is mostly confined to the features of superposition and indeterminacy.

But the more challenging aspects of weirdness are in the relativistic context, where explanations in terms of local hidden (classical) variables are pretty much ruled out.

Still, emphasizing the commonalities in disparate branches of physics by explaining them in terms of functionals over algebras is worthwhile. Even though I have physics and maths degrees, I did not think of things this way until you pointed it out (many years ago now).
 
  • #256
A. Neumaier said:
For a 2-level system, the density matrix is a matrix expressible in terms of four definite real numbers, which is not so different from a classical phase space position that takes 6 real numbers for its description. There are are also classical observables with matrix shape, such as the inertia tensor of a rigid body. The density matrix is analogous.

For more complex quantum systems, the number of definite real numbers needed to fix the state is bigger (or even infinite), but this is also the case in classical complex objects or fields. Thus the ontology of physical reality is as real as one can have it in a formal model of reality.

Response probabilities can be determined from the density matrix, but one can also determine response probabilities from classical chaotic systems. This therefore has nothing to do with the underlying ontology.

This has me pondering the ontology of the the density matrix vs that of the state vector.
http://arxiv.org/pdf/1412.6213v2.pdf
I'm confident that you are familiar with this paper, or the general argument at least. I'm curious what your impression is on this issue, and how you see the ontological relationship of the state vector, reduced state vector, density matrix, etc.
 
  • #257
Feeble Wonk said:
the ontological relationship of the state vector, reduced state vector, density matrix, etc.
In my view, state vectors are abstract mathematical tools, relevant in practice only for systems with few discrete degrees of freedom (such as spins, energy levels, or polarizations) that can be prepared in a pure state, and where all other degrees of freedom are projected out. Thus they have no ontological status in the physical world but are useful as abbreviated descriptions of these particular systems.

The typical state of a system realized in Nature is given by a density matrix. A density matrix is well-behaved under restriction to a subsystem, and hence can be used to describe systems of any size. In particular, it is consistent to consider each density matrix of a system in our universe as a restriction of the density matrix of the universe.

I postulate that the latter (described by a quantum field theory that we don't know yet in detail) is objectively existent in the sense of realism, and objectively determines the density of everything in the universe, and hence in any part of it. As a consequence, the density matrix of any subsystem that can be objectively delineated from the rest of the universe is also objective (though its dynamics is partially uncertain and hence stochastic, since the coupling to the environment - the remaining universe - is ignored).

On the other hand, our human approximations to these density matrices are subjective since they depend on how much we know (or postulate) about the system. They are only as good as the extent to which they approximate the true, objective density matrix of the system.

For example, a cup of water left alone is after a while in a state approximately described by a density matrix of the form discussed in statistical thermodynamics. This has the advantage that the density matrix can be described by a few parameters only. This suffices to determine its macroscopic properties, and hence is used in practice although the true density matrix is slightly different and would account for tiny, practically irrelevant deviations from thermodynamics.

The more detailed a state description is the more parameters are needed to describe it since a quantum field has infinitely many degrees of freedom in any extended region of space. For more, read Chapter 10 of my book linked to in post #2.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes Mentz114
  • #258
I just want to chime into say thanks the contributors (especially A. Neumaier) here. It's a very interesting read. I'm not qualified to contribute to the debate but can understand it.

It's good to see a discussion about a concept again. Thanks.
 
  • Like
Likes bhobba
  • #259
stevendaryl said:
You have a source of some unknown kind of signal that periodically sends a pair of signals
This cannot be done for quantum signals. The standard experimental settings (of which the present one seems to be an abstraction) produce signals at random times.

stevendaryl said:
Each time the source sends its signals, exactly one of Alice's LEDs light up, and exactly one of Bob's LED's light up.

How can one perform such an experiment? You need to take into account losses due to unavoidable imperfections. Already a 40% photo detection efficiency is considered high! If one acknowledges that in the description of the experiment, things don't look quite that spectacular.

I am still waiting for your reply to this post.
 
Last edited:
  • #260
It's idealized, but that loophole free Bell test I mentioned earlier is real and the strangeness is intact.
 
  • #261
ddd123 said:
that loophole free Bell test I mentioned earlier is real and the strangeness is intact.
But (like everything in the context of Bell's theorem) it's phrased in terms of particles. I liked stevendaryl's attempt to remove every reference to particles. Unfortunately his particular choices dramatically magnify the weirdness by using highly unrealistic assumptions.
 
  • #262
A. Neumaier said:
This cannot be done for quantum signals. The standard experimental settings of which the present seems to be an abstraction produce signals at random times.

How can one perform such an experiment? You need to take into account losses due to unavoidable imperfections. Already a 40% photo detection efficiency is considered high! If one acknowledges that in the description of the experiment, things don't look quite that spectacular.
stevendaryl's example can be used to analyze QM model. It is not quite that useful to analyze real experiments like these most recent ones:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1508.05949
http://arxiv.org/abs/1511.03189
http://arxiv.org/abs/1511.03190
You are right that with 40% detection efficiency local models are not ruled out. But in two photon experiments mentioned above they have achieved system efficiencies (across all setup) around 75% and they use superconductors based detectors with efficiency higher than 90%.
To avoid random signal time they use pulsed lasers (they have to account for cases of two photon pairs in single pulse).
And the other experiment uses electrons that are entangle via entanglement swapping. So detection processes are macrocopically distinct and determined and with 100% detection efficiency. But it analyzes only subensemble. However this does not opens any (known) loopholes as decision about inclusion into subensemble is made at third location that is spacelike separated from both detection processes (that are performed in any case).
 
  • #263
zonde said:
To avoid random signal time they use pulsed lasers (they have to account for cases of two photon pairs in single pulse).
And the other experiment uses electrons that are entangle via entanglement swapping. So detection processes are macrocopically distinct and determined and with 100% detection efficiency. But it analyzes only subensemble.
In both cases there is still significant residual randomness in the timing: In the first case due to 10-25% missed photons, and in the second case since the selection of the subensemble introduces randomness.
 
  • #264
A. Neumaier said:
But (like everything in the context of Bell's theorem) it's phrased in terms of particles. I liked stevendaryl's attempt to remove every reference to particles. Unfortunately his particular choices dramatically magnify the weirdness by using highly unrealistic assumptions.

It's a real experiment, not a theory, they did it, you can rephrase it if you want. I contend that it wouldn't change much, but I'm open to possibilities.
 
  • #265
ddd123 said:
It's a real experiment, not a theory, they did it, you can rephrase it if you want.
I won't rephrase it myself. If you want me to discuss it, describe it in a similar way as stevendaryl without mentioning particles but including all details that in your opinion are necessary and makes the outcome look weird. And, for the sake of easy reference, please add to the post describing your setting the reference to the paper you took as blueprint. Then I'll give an analysis from my point of view.
 
  • #266
That's too much work for me, but if I were you (that is, convinced of the possibility of eliminating the weirdness by rephrasing) since this is the crux of the whole matter and arguably the only irreducible weirdness in QM I would try it. That or other similar loophole-free tests you prefer. Otherwise it's just a dogma and I wouldn't feel at ease with it. But to each his own I guess.
 
  • #267
A. Neumaier said:
This cannot be done for quantum signals. The standard experimental settings (of which the present one seems to be an abstraction) produce signals at random times.

Fair enough. But is this an important point in understanding EPR-type experiments, or is it just a complication that makes it messier to reason about?

How can one perform such an experiment? You need to take into account losses due to unavoidable imperfections. Already a 40% photo detection efficiency is considered high! If one acknowledges that in the description of the experiment, things don't look quite that spectacular.

Same question. I have heard of attempts to get around Bell's inequality by taking advantage of detector inefficiencies and noise, but I thought that such loopholes were not considered very promising in light of recent experiments

I am still waiting for your reply to this post.

I'm not sure I can give a definitive answer ahead of time. The way that such arguments go is:

"Look, here's a classical situation that bears some similarity with EPR."

"Yes, but that situation differs from EPR in these important ways, so I don't see why that analogy is helpful..."

I suppose that such a back-and-forth dialog could at least refine the exact sense in which EPR is weird, compared to analogous classical situations.
 
  • #268
A. Neumaier said:
In both cases there is still significant residual randomness in the timing: In the first case due to 10-25% missed photons
You would have to examine derivations for CH and Eberhard inequalities if you want to be sure that 75% efficiency is enough. They are using particle concept of course but at least Eberhard inequality can be rewritten without particles if you allow some form of counterfactual reasoning (it will apply to any model of reality but not exactly to reality itself).
A. Neumaier said:
in the second case since the selection of the subensemble introduces randomness.
Does this introduces some loophole? As far as I have analyzed it this does not change anything.

I would like to emphasize that question whether reality is local is rather much harder. But it is much more easier to ask if QM is local as we can use idealized predictions and counterfactual reasoning. And I suppose that stevendaryl was trying to address weirdness of QM and not exactly weirdness of reality.
 
  • #269
But, as I understood him, Neumaier doesn't really want to recover local realism, simply find classical analogues of phenomena in some way that makes the absence of local realism look reasonable enough.
 
  • #270
stevendaryl said:
I'm not sure I can give a definitive answer ahead of time.
I just want to make sure that your model won't change during the discussion. For, years ago, I had wasted a lot of time in similar discussions where when I made a point on some scenario, the reply was '' but this doesn't explain ...'', where ''...'' was a different setting. One can never satisfy such participants in a discussion.

It is a different matter when you find whatever explanation I can give insufficiently convincing for explaining your particular setting. In this case, we may differ in what is sufficiently convincing, but at least we are not shifting grounds, and the argument will have bounded length.

stevendaryl said:
Yes, but that situation differs from EPR in these important ways
If you replace ''differs from EPR'' by ''differs from the setting in post #234'', this kind of arguments are constructive. If we have to argue what was the real intention of EPR, is becomes endless.

stevendaryl said:
Same question.
My comment was intended to convey that your setting becomes more convincing (and trying to explain it more attractive to me) if you drop 'periodically' or replace it by 'random', and if you don't insist on perfect correlations but on high correlations. My analysis will surely not depend on the particular value of the thresholds. I'd appreciate if you'd edit your post #234 accordingly, so that it still displays what you find weird but is closer to reality.
 

Similar threads

Replies
8
Views
3K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
3K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
2K
  • Sticky
  • · Replies 0 ·
Replies
0
Views
8K
  • · Replies 36 ·
2
Replies
36
Views
6K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
12
Views
1K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
7K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K