baywax
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Jarle said:Not in any way.
Is that a real defense or a product of your deluded senses?
Jarle said:Not in any way.
baywax said:Is that a real defense or a product of your deluded senses?
Jarle said:Am I supposed to defend against this:
"If what you're saying here is true... and real... then you're not really being real and why would anyone believe what you say."
?
That's nonsense.
Galteeth said:To bring this back down to Earth a bit:
Does the tree make a sound? No, a sound is a perception of the brain that in absence of a brain does not occur (let's assume for the sake of agument there are no birds or other brains to hear the sound)
Does the falling tree produce sound waves? Yes, and these will have an effect on the surrouding environment that in principle could be measured.
What about all this quantum business? From my understanding, if the tree does in fact fall in the forest, the odds of it not producing sound waves are so astronomically low that you don't really have to worry about that. This system is going to be descripable classcally.
srfriggen said:and no one is around to hear it does it make a sound?...
my real question is, does the tree even exist if no one is around? and what qualifies an "observer". do wave functions collapse only in the presence of humans? why can't schroedinger's cat tell if it is dead?
I guess I'm asking for a general overview so that I can contribute CORRECT information the next time conversation of this type starts. Nothing worse than asserting incorrect facts about physics, or anything for that matter.
Are sound waves an emergent phenomenon of a quantum state? Is a sound wave a macro or micro event?
ValenceE said:Hello all,
baywax, you ask;
Of course a sound wave is macro from micro… it’s source is the resultant of all micro interactions between the external energetic shell of the tree’s bark, making its way between the surrounding air molecules, with every external energetic shell of any and all ‘things’ that it will interact with as it falls down.
The complexity and amplitude of the wave front strengthens as the falling tree interacts more and more until it comes to a standstill.
No sense of hearing around to hear it… no sound, just a bunch of energetic interactions.
There is a sense of hearing around to hear it… then the macro becomes micro again through the vibrating eardrum which, in turn, triggers the entire resolution/recognition process that makes it a ‘sound’.
Regards,
VE
Descartz2000 said:Technically yes the tree does exist if no one is around. But, it is insignificant as it takes a conscious observer to identify the tree as separate from its surroundings, It exists all along, but it is meaningless without an observer. An observer can make sense of it after, but prior to being observed there is no one to label and determine that it is even a tree. To separate an object from its surroundings is a conceptualization that requires a brain and its processes of identification. But yes, technically it does exist in the general sense.
Many thanks valence ... how does neuronal interaction with the stipes and hammer of the ear make the sound wave micro?
ValenceE said:Please baywax, you know better than ask me that question…VE
ABSTRACT
The effects of sound and music on plant growth have been an intriguing subject and
the fascination of many a horticulturist over the years . Many have claimed the effects of
talking or the playing of classical music to the plants . Surprisingly, this has some scientific
basis, according to research done mainly by the scientists from China and Japan .
baywax said:Perhaps the observer needs the tree and the sound to be considered existent. Perhaps the observer is "meaningless" without interaction of some sort.
Please define "meaningless"/![]()
DrClapeyron said:The tree falling question is a good example to show humans are extremely conceited. Why would anything's existence be dependent upon our observation?
DaveC426913 said:Who said anything about humans - other than you? Now that's kind of conceited.![]()
The humour is to be found in the fact that my statement should be so obvious as to go without saying.DrClapeyron said:I like your humor but silly questions always warrant silly responses.
DaveC426913 said:The humour is to be found in the fact that my statement should be so obvious as to go without saying.
What makes you think we're talking about humans? Do squirrels hear the sound? Of course they do. If the tree fell and there were no squirrels, would it make a sound? Same question.
Before humans walked the Earth, sounds still existed.
The philosophical question of whether a tree makes a sound is perfectly valid while having absolutely nothing to do with human conceit.
So - what was your contribution again?
What does that have to do with anything?DrClapeyron said:The question was asked on an internet forum directed at humans. You aren't going to say squirrels check up on their emails daily and then visit physicsforum?
DaveC426913 said:What does that have to do with anything?
You did not answer my question. Why do you think this question presumes the conceit of humans?DrClapeyron said:The tree was certainly around when it fell, why wouldn't the tree count as an observer?
DaveC426913 said:You did not answer my question. Why do you think this question presumes the conceit of humans?
I contend that the question is perfectly valid without any reference to humans' participation, so why are you presuming anyone thinks humans must be involved, and thus assuming our conceit?
Please explain.
DrClapeyron said:So does one refer to something other than a human? Let's look at the setting: the woods. Woods implies something away from human construction, society and presence. We are lead to believe that there is no one in the woods. Apparently the animals and plants and the tree itself never count as one or an observer.
Yes. That is a perfectly valid line of argument.DrClapeyron said:So does one refer to something other than a human? Let's look at the setting: the woods. Woods implies something away from human construction, society and presence. We are lead to believe that there is no one in the woods. Apparently the animals and plants and the tree itself never count as one or an observer.
I've got some ideas for a demo of that. All I need is some funding...kote said:We have no idea what the sensation of echolocation is like. I'm pretty sure none of us know what it's like to be a bat.
Jarle said:That it is a tree, or what sound is is irrelevant. The riddle is supposed to make us focus on the link between the concepts of perception and existence.
Does it make sense to consider the existence of an object independent of perception? I say no; the object is a purely a product of our sensory apparatus. It is a construction of the mind - an interpretation of a formless "external world".
DaveC426913 said:The pressure waves exist independent of any person or animal around to perceive them.
Jarle said:Pressure waves are concepts created by the mind as any other concept. Pressure waves are also a construction of the mind. They do not exist independently of the perceiver.