Finbar said:
In a way it is like "hidden variables" except the variables are not hidden they are just coarse grained such that they appear to be absent in the QM description at some scale. So if what you mean by "non-physical" is "non-measureable" then I agree.
Yes, non-measureable, non-observable, or non-inferrable are synonyms to what I mean. However usually something beeing observable has a specific meaning in the context of normal QM, this is why I avoid that word. Since we are speculating in about a generalistion of QM here, the concept of observables are also generalised. As we already know the exact meaning of "what is an observable" is indeed one of the key problems.
But I think we mean the same thing.
Rovelli's partial/complete observables paper illustrates part of the problem, but he does not resolve it. The problem is that observables are unavoidably observer dependent, at the same time there is the vision to find an oberver invariant description of physical law.
IMO, this "problem" is exactly why there is no static observer invariant description of physical law. This is where the evolutionary perspective enter in my view. Note the - somewhat weak, but still - analogy here to Einsteins resistance to a nonstatic universe.
Finbar said:
Your last sentence is very nice. Are you thinking along the lines of how the definition of the vacuum is dependent on the gravitational field?
Because in the paper he mentions that the infinitely many states should be associated to the vacuum(say of an atom). Then in gravity the degrees of freedom that are observable for each observer becomes dependent of the gravitational field.
I haven't had time to read th epaper yet, need to do some xmas preps this weekend, but I certainly use different metaphors that than, but my first impresison is that the paper is more to my liking than the average paper! this is why I wil lread it when get around to.
My thinking in shorts starts from the inside perspective, where each observer has what one can call an observable horizon, which I see as an "index", the size of this index is always bounded by the total complexity of the observer. This index can via certain processes grow or shrink. Now gravity (in my view) is the phenomenon by which an thirs observer sees two systems get attracted because their "probing into their environment", will yield a very slowly by steadily attraction. This attraction is in my view described to take place in an information space, where the distance measure is a kind of information divergence. So in my view, both space and gravity emerge as a result of two observers sharing the same environment are doing randow "moves"/"walks" and that the feedback from the environment brings them together. But the exact formalism from this is not yet mature. But the general vision is reasonably clear.
Finbar said:
I think that reality is scale dependent.
...
Perhaps quantum gravity will provide a link between scales to form a scale independent reality.
I fully agree that the inferrable or measurable reality is scale dependent, where in my view "scaling" refers to the complexity(or mass) of the observer.
However my bet is that QG will provide the link to the scaling not in a independent way as in terms of realist (like I think Rovellis thinks), but rather in terms of an evolving description (more like SMolins evolving law). But for practical purposes as compare to present models, scale independent reality might be close.
I hope to read it during the wekend.
/Fredrik