B How do we know some particles don't exist until measured?

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I don't know if I am right, but I have read about how some particles do not even exist until measured. How would we know this?
 
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ShayanJ said:
We don't. That's part of some [URL="https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/fundamental-difference-interpretations-quantum-mechanics/"]interpretations of quantum mechanics[/URL] which means quantum mechanics itself is silent on it.
Also, even in those interpretations its not like some particles are like this and some are not. Those interpretations consider this to be a property of any quantity related to any quantum system.
thank you for clearing that up. But there must me some merit to this interpretation. What is their argument for this? Is this the Copenhagen interpretation? Because I know Niels Bohr believed in the particle disappearance thing.
 
ShayanJ said:
We don't. That's part of some [URL="https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/fundamental-difference-interpretations-quantum-mechanics/"]interpretations of quantum mechanics[/URL] which means quantum mechanics itself is silent on it.
Also, even in those interpretations its not like some particles are like this and some are not. Those interpretations consider this to be a property of any quantity related to any quantum system.
btw what interpretation do you believe in? I lean towards the many worlds interpretation.
 
Lunct said:
thank you for clearing that up. But there must me some merit to this interpretation. What is their argument for this? Is this the Copenhagen interpretation? Because I know Niels Bohr believed in the particle disappearance thing.
This mostly comes from Bell's theorem. It says that nature is either realistic or local, it can't be both. So local theories have to have this property. But of course some interpretations can work around this, like superdeterminism, or maybe many worlds too, I'm not sure.
 
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Lunct said:
btw what interpretation do you believe in? I lean towards the many worlds interpretation.
At first, its not a matter of belief, its a matter of preferring one over others. Its an important distinction!
I'm still not that much specific about which interpretation I prefer, but I do know that I don't like Bohmian mechanics and many worlds.
 
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ShayanJ said:
At first, its not a matter of belief, its a matter of preferring one over others. Its an important distinction!
I'm still not that much specific about which interpretation I prefer, but I do know that I don't like Bohmian mechanics and many worlds.
Is Bohm is kind of like saying that everything follows a deterministic law and there is no free will, along with no measurement problem?
 
The no free will part is not part of Bohmian mechanics(BM), its a part of superdeterminism.
But other things you said are true. And BM doesn't have measurement problem because its a realistic theory, which by Bell's theorem, means its non-local.
 
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Lunct said:
btw what interpretation do you believe in?
It's really irrelevant since they all conform to the same math and are equal at the level of "shut up and calculate"
 
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phinds said:
It's really irrelevant since they all conform to the same math and are equal at the level of "shut up and calculate"
but the way I see it, it is also important to explain why you can get to that math.
 
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Lunct said:
but the way I see it, it is also important to explain why you can get to that math.
The interpretations happen after the math says what's happening so, yeah, they are an attempt to say WHY the math says what it says but since all interpretations come off the same math, none is preferred (except as a personal preference)
 
  • #12
phinds said:
The interpretations happen after the math says what's happening so, yeah, they are an attempt to say WHY the math says what it says but since all interpretations come off the same math, none is preferred (except as a personal preference)
true *pretends to know what he is talking about*
 
  • #13
phinds said:
The interpretations happen after the math says what's happening so, yeah, they are an attempt to say WHY the math says what it says but since all interpretations come off the same math, none is preferred (except as a personal preference)
But even that is an assumption that is just stated a lot. There may be fringe cases of applications of QM that are still not tested and different interpretations disagree in their predictions about them. It may still be possible to be able to experimentally distinguish different interpretations and we just don't know how or don't have precise enough measurement devices for. One example is quantum non-equilibrium in Bohmian mechanics which I'm not sure in what situation, if any, happens.
 
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  • #14
ShayanJ said:
But even that is an assumption that is just stated a lot. There may be fringe cases of applications of QM that are still not tested and different interpretations disagree in their predictions about them. It may still be possible to be able to experimentally distinguish different interpretations and we just don't know how or don't have precise enough measurement devices for. One example is quantum non-equilibrium in Bohmian mechanics which I'm not sure in what situation, if any, happens.
just took the words right out of my mouth
 
  • #15
ShayanJ said:
It may still be possible to be able to experimentally distinguish different interpretations and we just don't know how or don't have precise enough measurement devices for.

This is only possible if either the theory differs or the way the theory is applied differs in such a way it yields
different experimental outcomes. I know of no case where this is the claim. Has anyone made such a claim?
 
  • #16
Lunct said:
I don't know if I am right, but I have read about how some particles do not even exist until measured. How would we know this?
It's just presented this way to pop science audience to make it more interesting.
In reality they don't have defined properties until they are measured.
 
  • #17
Paul Colby said:
This is only possible if either the theory differs or the way the theory is applied differs in such a way it yields
different experimental outcomes. I know of no case where this is the claim. Has anyone made such a claim?

Yup, Davies has an essay on this topic called "Particles don't exist", talks about particle detectors, and more. I'd have to read the essay again to get his points, and if needbe, I can respond tomorrow. But IIRC, particles are only a utilization of a flat minkowski space, and if you go into curved spaces, you'll have some observers seeing particles being created when in the persons rest frame they see none.
 
  • #18
Look, someone would first need to explain to me what "exists before measurement" even means quantitatively. To get quantitative about it implies some measurement so it would seem that an explanation would be amusing. Exist before measurement isn't even meaningful classically.
 
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  • #19
Paul Colby said:
This is only possible if either the theory differs or the way the theory is applied differs in such a way it yields
different experimental outcomes. I know of no case where this is the claim. Has anyone made such a claim?
As I said, one example is the quantum non-equilibrium in Bohmian mechanics.
 
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  • #20
Lunct said:
but the way I see it, it is also important to explain why you can get to that math.

We know exactly the why of the fomalism which every interpretation has - it just an extension of probability theory:
http://www.scottaaronson.com/democritus/lec9.html
https://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0101012.pdf
https://arxiv.org/abs/1402.6562

Basicallly QM is part of an area of math called generalized probability models or theories. Ordinary probability theory has distinguishable outcomes (also called pure states) eg we can tell the difference easily between raining and not raining. But what if we relax some of these assumed things about ordinary probability theory - well you get generalized theories and that is what QM is. It has a number of distinguishing features such as you can't tell the difference between pure states. Also in ordinary probability theory you can't continuously go from one pure state to another via other pure states. But in QM you can. If you model a physical system by some generalized probability state space it turns out QM is the simplest theory that will allow you to continuously go from one pure state to another. But physically we expect a theory to be like that ie if its in one pure state at time t1 and another at time t2 it should have gone through some other state while doing that.

But knowing formally the why of something is entirely different to knowing what it means. We face that in even good old probability theory - the Kolmogorov axioms tell us formally what it all about - but what does it mean. We have all sorts of answers - Bayseanism, frequentest, decision theory to name just a few. In a lot of respects all interpretations of QM is this applied to QM - see the following by John Bayez:
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/bayes.html

its nothing new and just like probability no one has been able to definitively answer which is correct - maybe it will never be answered.

Personally I adhere to the Ensemble interpretation because it's just, basically, the frequentest interpretation applied to QM. Most applied mathematicians think of frequentest ideas in probability theory, but some like Bayesianism (those into Bayesian inference) which corresponds to Copenhagen, and some like Decision Theory (ie probability is the weight a rational agent would decide if faced with a deterministic situation but for some reason doesn't have all the information - its used by Actuaries in so called Credibility Theory). The decision theory approach is favored by Many Worlds adherents and maybe even BM.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #21
Paul Colby said:
Look, someone would first need to explain to me what "exists before measurement" even means quantitatively. To get quantitative about it implies some measurement so it would seem that an explanation would be amusing. Exist before measurement isn't even meaningful classically.

Exactly.

This whole quantum interpretation thing is loaded with stuff like that - they freely use words like exist before observation, realty etc etc. All of which are very very deep philosophical questions that there is no answer to. Best to avoid them in physics or use them very sparingly. I generally don't like quoting philosophers but IMHO Wittgenstein expressed it best - Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent. But then again before becoming a philosopher he was an aeronautical scientist. He went to further his studies by doing a PhD in applied math but after attending some lectures by Bertrand Russell (people sometimes forget he was also a mathematician) he switched to philosophy. Just as an aside he published his famous Tractatus which the above comes from. Someone noted he never completed his PhD so he submitted it as his thesis. He said to the examining committee - “Don’t worry. I know you’ll never understand it.”. The examining committees report was masterfully succinct: “I consider that this is a work of genius but, even if it is not, it is well above the standard required for a PhD degree.”

QM, like ordinary probability theory says nothing about what happens before observations occcur. In flipping as coin probability theory says nothing about what's going on while its flipping. Same with QM - its silent on the whole issue But that doesn't stop people endlessly speculating.

I wouldn't say its a waste of time because it does help clarify some things in QM. At first sight you might think QM has this thing called wave-function collapse. But we have non collapse interpretations so obviously it doesn't. From that viewpoint its quite a reasonable thing to do.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #22
Lunct said:
but the way I see it, it is also important to explain why you can get to that math.

And that's what drives me too :wideeyed:

I got interested in QM thanks to my chemistry teacher in high school. He was trying to explain atomic orbitals. When he got to the p-orbitals I had a rather profound 'WTF?' moment. I asked a zillion questions which he couldn't answer and then he said "Don't worry, nobody understands QM properly". That was like a red rag to a bull to me and I was determined that I was going to understand it!

The foolishness of youth. Over 3 decades later and I still don't understand QM - although I don't understand it to a much deeper level now.

The greats like Feynman, Weinberg, Gell-Mann, and so on and so on, don't understand it to an even greater depth!

It's true that 'why' is a never-ending spiral down the rabbit hole - you can just keep on going getting 'deeper' and 'deeper' answers (if they exist). But, personally, the 'why' is important to me - even though I know I will never get to an ultimate why, I would like to travel a bit further down Why Boulevard than I have so far before I stop for coffee and a muffin :smile:
 
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  • #23
Lunct said:
thank you for clearing that up. But there must me some merit to this interpretation. What is their argument for this? Is this the Copenhagen interpretation? Because I know Niels Bohr believed in the particle disappearance thing.

The chief merit of the Copenhagen is that it is a practical interpretation.

You shouldn't take this particle disappearing thing too seriously - the Copenhagen interpretation is simply agnostic about whether the moon exists when you are not looking at it.
 
  • #24
Lunct said:
I don't know if I am right, but I have read about how some particles do not even exist until measured. How would we know this?

In my previous reply I didn't really attempt to answer your question. The answer to your specific question is, as others have said, "we don't"

But that's not really a feature of QM - it's more a feature of the question. I mean how do you know your sofa doesn't suddenly pop out of existence when you get up to make a coffee and then pop back into existence when you come back to watch the second half of Doctor Strange? You don't, strictly speaking. We'll let the philosophers tie themselves up in knots over that one o0)

It's more interesting to consider what physics, and QM, does tell us about the nature of reality. If we consider the phenomenon of entanglement we find that we are constrained in our choices of how we describe 'reality'. We find that ascribing definite properties (like values of spin in particular directions, or momentum, or polarization, and so on) to the individual objects of an entangled pair is not permitted. It's not permitted because the logical consequence of thinking like that is to predict the wrong answers for experiments with these entangled systems.

That's really quite profound - if these entangled objects individually really did have definite properties then, sure, we'd be able to list them - write them down, at least in principle. Any theory we construct from such assumed properties is doomed to fail as a description of nature.

OK - there's a way out - we could have definite properties but then we also need to imagine that there's some mechanism, or effect, we haven't accounted for. This effect must be faster than light and it must allow information about distant things to affect local results (results 'here') in such a way that the answers come out just right. This assumed 'effect' is not hindered by anything - put a mile of concrete, a mile of lead, a mile of neutron star material in between you and the distant things - doesn't matter. It's like magic.

So either we accept that things at the 'quantum' level don't have definite properties in the absence of measurement, or we accept there's some magical effect that travels faster than light (and probably instantaneously) through anything we put in between that makes things come out just so (and in such a way that we can't use this to communicate). My personal preference is not to give credence to such a magical superfluous effect.

So discounting any strange faster than light effect we have the situation that QM tells us that it is wrong, in certain cases, to even suppose that objects have definite properties before they are measured. I will probably get into trouble for this, but descending into 'pop science' vernacular it's as if 'reality' is continually distilled from an ocean of potential reality.

Is it clear just 'why' nature is like this? Not to me it's not - but it's endlessly fascinating :smile:
 
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  • #25
So, let's talk about particles overall. From how I understand it, particles are just a utilization of a flat space. Why is that? Well thanks to do the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, we really don't know where our particles are at. This doesn't matter on a flat space, because of symmetry. If we try to apply this to a curved space (for the most part), we can't invoke a symmetry argument. So what's the point of talking about particles at all if we can't generalize their arguments to curved spaces? We shouldn't be talking about whether or not particles exist before our detector detects them (a whole other issue on its own), but rather if we should even WORRY about particles at all! There are far better observables to use that we *can* use, and *will* generalize to curved spaces.

I think Paul Davies can say it better than I can, so here are some quotes from one of his papers: "Bohr taught us that quantum mechanics is just an algorithm for computing results of measurements. Any discussion about what is a 'real, physics vacuum', must therefore be related to the behavior of real, physical measuring devices, in this case particle-number detectors. Armed with such heuristic devices, we may then assert the following. There are quantum states and there are particle detectors. Quantum field theory enables us to predict probabilistically how a particular detector will respond to that state. That is all. That is all there can ever be in physics because physics is about the observations and measurements that we can make in the world. We can't talk meaningfully about whether such-and-such a state contains particles except in the context of a specified particle detector measurement. To claim (as some authors occasionally do!) that when a certain detector responds (registers particles) in somebody's cherished vacuum state that the particles concerned are 'fictitious' or 'quasi-particles', or that the detector is being 'misled' or 'distorted' is an empty statement."

-A few paragraphs later after going through some math about Rindler particles, and worldlines-

"In ordinary laboratory quantum theory, we often talk about 'particles' as though they really exist, in the sense of entities with well defined properties independent of our observations. But in fact we cannot substantiate that image, for a 'particle' is merely an abstract heuristic model that provides an easy mental image of how one type of detector measurement is related to another. There is no need (and I contend it is meaningless) to regard the particle as a really existing thing skipping measuring devices.

This strongly Copenhagen philosophy receives, in my view, powerful support from the particle analyses of curved space quantum field theory, where any attempt to hang on to the idea of particles being 'really there' is doomed to failure. Is a Rindler particle 'really there' in the state |0_M>? Is a rotating particle 'really there' when a rotating detector responds to |O_M>? Is it the Bogolubov transformation which tells you what particles are present, or a system of detectors? If the latter, which detectors? Which trajectories? The answer is that the idea of 'particles' is just a model, which works well for some conventional situations, but is usually utterly useless as soon as one moves away from inertial observers in flat space-time."
"
I honestly think the groundwork laid by Wheeler/Fulling/Davies/Dewitt isn't appreciated enough, and more people should take a look at the papers they've written on these subjects!
 
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  • #26
Simon Phoenix said:
The foolishness of youth. Over 3 decades later and I still don't understand QM - although I don't understand it to a much deeper level now. The greats like Feynman, Weinberg, Gell-Mann, and so on and so on, don't understand it to an even greater depth!

One professor said you will spend your whole life trying to understand it beyond its formalism which everybody understands and almost certainly get nowhere. I certainly have tried and failed miserably so basically and frustratingly gave up. Interpretations are valuable for the reason I said - it elucidates the formalism better. And every now and again someone way beyond my class like Bell makes a breakthrough, but they are few and far between.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #27
ShayanJ said:
As I said, one example is the quantum non-equilibrium in Bohmian mechanics.

Cool.

Has this Bohmian formalism been consistently extended to a completely relativistic many particle formalism? Can this be said for an equivalent replacement for LQFT and the standard model? If not it's just more hot air in the quantum swirl. To be a viable replacement for what exists now these things must be shown first. A theory which replaces any of the QM formalism with something with measurable differences must first be consistent with all the physics that is known. This is required before it can be taken seriously.
 
  • #28
romsofia said:
So, let's talk about particles overall. From how I understand it, particles are just a utilization of a flat space.

I don't know what you mean by that.

If you mean QFT uses SR and not GR - yes that's true.

But what is not so well known is there is a QFT theory of gravity valid up to the Plank scale:
https://arxiv.org/abs/1209.3511

From this its easy to derive a non quantum equation of gravity valid for flat space-times ie with curvature so small its essentially flat. Now here is the interesting thing - its easy to extend it with no further assumptions other than general invarience to the full EFE's - not general covarience which has been shown to be vacuous - but invarience which is slightly different. You will find the detail here:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1107012945/?tag=pfamazon01-20

Anyway the upshot is everything is fine up to the plank scale. Beyond that who knows - string theory may be the answer - but that has stalled even though its application to all sorts of areas has grown hugely. We simply do not know if our equations written in flat space-time is an issue or not. We know up to the Plank scale it isn't.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #29
bhobba said:
I don't know what you mean by that.

If you mean QFT uses SR and not GR - yes that's true.

But what is not so well known is there is a QFT theory of gravity valid up to the Plank scale:
https://arxiv.org/abs/1209.3511
"Quite possibly, in the year 2100 our present quantum field theory, with its apparatus of Fock spaces, Lagrangians, field equations, commutation relations, and S matrices will be seen as a misguided forced marriage of classical field theory with quantum particle mechanics, more naive than the attempts of Kelvin, young Maxwell, and their contemporaries to model the electromagnetic ether with gears and rollers bearings" - Stephen Fulling.

The issue is not a qft in a curved space time, it's of particles themselves. Given an definite energy, or momentum of a particle, the position of the particle will be indeterminate. Once again, not an issue in a minkowskian space, but certainly in non-minkowski. In other words, particle states in QFT are associated with irreducible representations of the Poincare group. But when we go outside of a minkowski background, we don't have a symmetry group anymore (other than a few cases).

Another problem I'm aware with the particle notion outside of a minkowskian spacetime is the question, "Will an accelerating observer detect particles in empty space?" and the answer is yes. So what does this mean? To me, it means the particle concept has to go. I mean, I could be stuck in the 70-80s, and not be in modern times, but that is the literature I'm currently at. I'll take a look at the paper you've provided (but it will probably go over my head and I won't be able to fully appreciate it!).
 
  • #30
romsofia said:
To me, it means the particle concept has to go.

In the usual sense it has gone so I don't see your point.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #31
bhobba said:
In the usual sense it has gone so I don't see your point.

Thanks
Bill

My point was in response to this thread, particles don't exist outside of a minkowski spacetime, so OP needs to be more specific on "where" the measurement/particle is taking place. Even then, as I pointed out in my post, I take the position with Davies that particles have no meaning without a particle detector. So do particles exist before measurement? The answer, from my point of view, is an easy no. Particles make no sense "except in the context of a specified particle detector measurement."
 
  • #32
Paul Colby said:
Has this Bohmian formalism been consistently extended to a completely relativistic many particle formalism? Can this be said for an equivalent replacement for LQFT and the standard model? If not it's just more hot air in the quantum swirl. To be a viable replacement for what exists now these things must be shown first. A theory which replaces any of the QM formalism with something with measurable differences must first be consistent with all the physics that is known. This is required before it can be taken seriously.

The standard model is not known to be fully relativistic and many aspects can be notionally replaced by non-relativistically by lattice models, eg. https://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/0407140, https://arxiv.org/abs/1409.7414. The major gap is a lattice model that incorporates all aspects of chiral fermions and their interactions is still an open problem.
 
  • #33
atyy said:
The standard model is not known to be fully relativistic
If by fully one means compatible with GR then nothing is completely. The standard model is Lorentz invariant last I checked though people talk about non-invariant mods. QM is at the roots of so many known and verified things. A replacement/mod of QM has a big bar to meet. Seems prudent to check these known things first. Hence my question, is there a Bohmian replacement for the standard model? Once one starts changing the rules this becomes unclear.

atyy said:
aspects can be notionally replaced by non-relativistically by lattice models
This confuses theory with computational approximations IMO but whatever. Unclear what your point is exactly.
 
  • #34
bhobba said:
One professor said you will spend your whole life trying to understand it beyond its formalism which everybody understands and almost certainly get nowhere. I certainly have tried and failed miserably so basically and frustratingly gave up. Interpretations are valuable for the reason I said - it elucidates the formalism better. And every now and again someone way beyond my class like Bell makes a breakthrough, but they are few and far between.

Thanks
Bill
QT is a physical theory, and if you understand its formalism and how to apply it to observations in the real world, you have understood all there is to understand. What philosophers do with it for whatever purpose (I've never understood which purpose, to be honest), is their problem but not one of physics and it cannot be solved within physics. The only incomprehensible thing with QT is thus what philosophers mean with their unprecisely defined words, not QT as a physical theory.
 
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  • #35
vanhees71 said:
QT is a physical theory, and if you understand its formalism and how to apply it to observations in the real world, you have understood all there is to understand. What philosophers do with it for whatever purpose (I've never understood which purpose, to be honest), is their problem but not one of physics and it cannot be solved within physics. The only incomprehensible thing with QT is thus what philosophers mean with their unprecisely defined words, not QT as a physical theory.

I apologize if I am about to ask something that you have already answered many times in other threads; I don't recollect seeing a direct answer in the threads I've gone through, but it would be easy for me to have missed it.

Anyway - does the above quote mean you disagree with @Demystifier's conclusions in the paper he wrote on QT "myths" (that is, on interpretations not strictly proven)? Specifically when he finishes up his conclusion with the following:
To conclude, the claim that the fundamental principles of quantum theory are today completely understood, so that it only remains to apply these principles to various practical physical problems – is also a myth. Instead, quantum theory is a theory which is not yet completely understood at the most fundamental level and is open to further fundamental research. Through this paper, I have demonstrated this by discussing various fundamental myths in QM for which a true proof does not yet really exist. I have also demonstrated that all these myths are, in one way or another, related to the central myth in QM according to which objective unmeasured reality does not exist. I hope that this review will contribute to a better general conceptual understanding of quantum theory and make readers more cautious and critical before accepting various claims on QM as definite facts.

Another way of asking my question is, are there differences I am missing between what you're saying and what Demystifier is saying?

I should add that one reason I like this paper is that it is very careful to avoid deeming anyone interpretation of QT as "the truth"; rather, the author points out that although there are many plausible interpretations, as well as quite a few implausible interpretations, nonetheless an interpretation is an interpretation, even if we happen to agree with it.
 
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  • #36
I agree with everything in the above quote of @Demystifier.

QM (or rather QT, because I consider relativistic QFT as the most fundamental theory, not non-relativistic QM) is incomplete, as all our theories, because there's no rigorous foundation of relativistic QFT and not even a working consistent physicist's way to describe the quantum aspects of the gravitational interaction.

There's also nothing in QT leading to the conclusion that unobserved entities don't exist. I don't discuss the word "reality" anymore, because it's not clearly enough defined to discuss it in a way not leading to misunderstandings and a lot of useless gibberish.

Finally, I believe that the sciences and humanities nowadays have reached such a degree of speciality that there's no way to make any progress without specializing in a subject. My choice was (theoretical) physics and not philosophy, because I could make much sense of the former but nearly none of the latter.
 
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  • #37
vanhees71 said:
I agree with everything in the above quote of @Demystifier.

QM (or rather QT, because I consider relativistic QFT as the most fundamental theory, not non-relativistic QM) is incomplete, as all our theories, because there's no rigorous foundation of relativistic QFT and not even a working consistent physicist's way to describe the quantum aspects of the gravitational interaction.

There's also nothing in QT leading to the conclusion that unobserved entities don't exist. I don't discuss the word "reality" anymore, because it's not clearly enough defined to discuss it in a way not leading to misunderstandings and a lot of useless gibberish.

Finally, I believe that the sciences and humanities nowadays have reached such a degree of speciality that there's no way to make any progress without specializing in a subject. My choice was (theoretical) physics and not philosophy, because I could make much sense of the former but nearly none of the latter.

Good points but I would urge you not to give up on reality or existence. As scientists physicists are tasked with understanding reality, describing aspects (physical, observable etc) of existence.

Back to the OP.
The error is fundamental and not the fault of any physicist qua physicist, but the symptom of very bad philosophy, that accepts the possibility that a thing can be and not be at the same time.

Reality exists, independent of anyone's thoughts or wishes, and although it may be difficult to describe reality. "non-existence" simply not the way to characterize anything. Whatever a particle is, whatever properties it has at various times of measurement and non-measurement does not negate that it is what it is, or that it IS, (until such time as it isn't such as annihilation ... but then it changes form into other particles..).

If a particle does not possesses a definite position, momentum, or any other quantity/property, that does not mean it does not exist, (in fact the expectation value is not zero). If it can and/or does change into another particle or convert into energy, that is not an expression of its not existing, it is a consequence of it existing, and transforming, becoming, behaving according to what it is. If at anyone time it were not, it simply would not exhibit anything ever again... a particle which "went out" of existence between measurements would be a sheer nothing... and surely we would never measure it again... and also conservation laws would certainly be violated.

Particles (I am including the field not just a particular particle) "not existing" is simply an impossibility. Our understanding of what existence means cannot be so erroneous so as to contradict reality, it has to include it because that is what exists (reality is all that exists) and we need to accept it. Particles may change form, their properties may be indeterminate, but no thing exhibits "non-existence".
 
  • #38
Lunct said:
I don't know if I am right, but I have read about how some particles do not even exist until measured. How would we know this?
You have to reverse the question: how would you know it exist? You only know if you observe it.
Just like in a Pokemon game I used to play. I walk the path and when I'm in view of the hospital, nurse Joy is at the window waving at me. Was nurse Joy already at the window before the hospital came into view? Was the hospital already there while it was nowhere to be seen?
If I a red square is slowly flashing on my computer screen, does the red square exist when it is not there?
 
  • #39
ObjectivelyRational said:
1. ... a particle which "went out" of existence between measurements would be a sheer nothing... and surely we would never measure it again... and also conservation laws would certainly be violated.

2. Particles (I am including the field not just a particular particle) "not existing" is simply an impossibility. Our understanding of what existence means cannot be so erroneous so as to contradict reality, it has to include it because that is what exists (reality is all that exists) and we need to accept it. Particles may change form, their properties may be indeterminate, but no thing exhibits "non-existence".

1. Generally, there is no sense in QM that a particle actually ceases to exist between measurements. Precisely because of conservation issues as you mention.

2. And my above statement (1.) would NOT also apply to quantum properties. Their existence between measurements is questionable in a variety of situations, depending on your preferred interpretation.

Your statement 2 is actually circular: you assume that which you seek to prove. I appreciate it is eminently reasonable, but the consequences of Bell's Theorem leave the question open for now.
 
  • #40
DrChinese said:
1. Generally, there is no sense in QM that a particle actually ceases to exist between measurements. Precisely because of conservation issues as you mention.

2. And my above statement (1.) would NOT also apply to quantum properties. Their existence between measurements is questionable in a variety of situations, depending on your preferred interpretation.

Your statement 2 is actually circular: you assume that which you seek to prove. I appreciate it is eminently reasonable, but the consequences of Bell's Theorem leave the question open for now.

Sorry if I worded something to appear circular. That was not my intent. It might look circular due to my attempt to address the broad issues with narrow examples.

Physics is a study of what IS. An attempt to study "what is not" would be futile because "what is not" cannot have any consequence and cannot exhibit any property.

So then, in the study of things: things change forms but nothing disappears completely from existence, so whatever one studies, it can change but it cannot disappear into nothing which is what is implied by saying a particle "does not exist" (temporarily). In fact it has some form, perhaps indeterminate, perhaps a mix of energy or multiple particles/multiple states, perhaps even in a form which is bizzare, nonlocal, or difficult to comprehend, but it would be incorrect to claim it literally does not exist.

That's my point. I hope that does not come off as circular! :)
 
  • #41
ObjectivelyRational said:
Physics is a study of what IS.

A definition I prefer is along the lines, physics is a study of quantifiable natural phenomena. "Existence", "the way thing are" are all pretty obscure if define at all. Make these quantifiable or measurable phenomena and the discussion becomes well grounded at least operationally IMO.
 
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  • #42
Paul Colby said:
A definition I prefer is along the lines, physics is a study of quantifiable natural phenomena. "Existence", "the way thing are" are all pretty obscure if define at all. Make these quantifiable or measurable phenomena and the discussion becomes well grounded at least operationally IMO.

True.

I agree in principle. Although apart from subjective first person experience - i.e. the hard problem of "consciousness", there simply IS not much other than "quantifiable natural phenomena" (arbitrary assertions notwithstanding) :)
 
  • #43
ObjectivelyRational said:
True.

I agree in principle. Although apart from subjective first person experience - i.e. the hard problem of "consciousness", there simply IS not much other than "quantifiable natural phenomena" (arbitrary assertions notwithstanding) :)

Paul your point is well taken... Physicists also do not deal with reality at the level of biology, chemistry, and psychology etc. As a science it tends to be focused on the fundamentals i.e. physical (a little circular I know) phenomena which are quantifiable. (implicitly all phenomena are "natural" i.e. exhibited by nature/reality as it is)
 
  • #44
Lunct said:
I don't know if I am right, but I have read about how some particles do not even exist until measured. How would we know this?

IMO, a question of properties, not, of existing or not (objects)

What is measured?
.- Properties.

Without objects, there are no properties.
CFD.
 
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  • #45
physika said:
Without objects, there are no properties.

Yes, but how is "object" defined. One might argue an optical photon is not an object in the same sense as a ball bearing is. One may speak of photon properties in general but for an individual photon one can only claim to know what some it's "properties" were at measurement. Furthermore, these "properties" depend very strongly on the experiment under discussion. Photon statistics are very much a property of the source rather than photons themselves which are very very different than ball bearings. IMO these types of questions should be addressed within the context of physical theory and not before.
 
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  • #46
Lunct said:
...some particles do not even exist until measured. How would we know this?
"Particle" in this context means something that exhibits particle properties. Particle-like properties are undefined until the quantum interacts with something.
 
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  • #47
ObjectivelyRational said:
Paul your point is well taken... Physicists also do not deal with reality at the level of biology, chemistry, and psychology etc. As a science it tends to be focused on the fundamentals i.e. physical (a little circular I know) phenomena which are quantifiable. (implicitly all phenomena are "natural" i.e. exhibited by nature/reality as it is)
If physicists don't deal with reality than neither to chemists and biologists, which is of course nonsense. The natural sciences deal with reality, i.e., with the objectively observable facts of nature.

Psychology of course does not deal with reality but studies all kinds of imaginations of the human mind. The part of the natural sciences most related to psychology is neurology and brain research.
 
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  • #48
David Lewis said:
"Particle" in this context means something that exhibits particle properties.
Define particle properties? As I've pointed out previously, ball bearings and photons don't share the same properties even if we neglect mass and spin.
 
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  • #49
physika said:
Without objects, there are no properties.
You're right, but sometimes the properties are not intrinsic solely to the object itself but rather belong to a system consisting of the object, and something else with which it interacts.
 
  • #50
atyy said:
You shouldn't take this particle disappearing thing too seriously - the Copenhagen interpretation is simply agnostic about whether the moon exists when you are not looking at it.
The problem is that, at least in the form defended by Bohr, it is far from agnostic about it. If Bohr would have been agnostic about it, there would have been no issue at all about completeness. Bohr would have to be agnostic about completeness too.
Of course, Copenhagen is not bad at all from a pragmatic point of view. But one had to get rid of the positivist baggage to make it useful instead of confusing.
 
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