Hello Atakor!
Atakor said:
First of all thanks for the link to Rovelli's talk, it's always a pleasur to listen to him.
( and even more to assist to his conferences).
Yes, to meet someone would be even more interesting, but that isn't practical for many, but to listen to talks by someone you know from books and papers are interesting! During longer car trips I tend to stuff an mp3 player with interesting lectures.
Atakor said:
Personnaly I think that the 'real reality' is just the Invariants of such transformations. just like in SR for ex.
Thus the Real wave function (if any) must be related to local wave functions, from which we can infer it _without getting out of the Universe_.
Does such a view contradict something ?
The essence of what you express here is as far as I understand it, pretty much right in line with rovellis thinking! One might think the analogy to relativit is brilliant, it's the analogy Rovelli refers to his relation QM papers.
Unfortunately I personally (many will disagree I am sure) don't think it's that "easy" (that's not to imply that it's "easy", just that I think it's more complex)
I have noticed that it is difficuly to communicate the argument though. But in short it has to do with certainty in these invariants. At some level of reasoning, if I may be bold to say this, the "mistake" I think Rovelli makes in his reasoning here is the very same reason that causes him in this relational QM arguments to silently avoid reasoning around the physical basis of probability.
IMO, the suggested reasoning is I think a good start, but it is not finished yet, there is more.
I have an apparently very odd way of reasoning about this, but my vision is that laws of physics are similar in structure to a particular form of uncertain inductive reasoning.
If we consider that there is something such as invariants, then a question within the context of inductive reasoning of any given observer appears: Is there a risk-free induction or deduction of these invariants from the point of view of this observer? I have thought about this a lot and as far my head allows, I can't see there is. If I get Rovelli right, he seems to imagine (in the same manner we argue about existence of limits - ie probability) that well the observer can't know this, but he could something like know it probabilistically and he can further know the probability with certainty.
I can't wrap my head around this, and until them, I maintain what opinion that something is wrong. However, there is no question in my mind that it "could work" and could improve our theories, but we are still then pushing one fundamental probleam ahead of us.
So in this sense, I try to look for a fundamental reasoning that stands up to high standards of reasoning.
I'm not sure if my objection is clear. I've briefly argued about this before, but few seem to be bothered by it. So my take on this, is not to reject rovelli's ideas. I think he has argued more sound than many indeed, but perhaps it can be further improved. And as long as I see ways to get to grips with these problems, I can't motivated myself to work out lenghy constructions based on what I have reason to think is a slightly flawed foundation.
So my objection has to do with that all understanding, and that includes human science, as well as relational information between two molecules, are subject to the same structure of inductive reasoning, where ALL information has to be formed during these constraints. The priors can't be pulled in from under the table. At best they coudl be randomly assigned, and that's they way I look to solve this.
Consider the simple problem: How can one experimentally determined a probability free of uncertainty? And the usual FAPP response is not enough. Then consider that the notion of probability usually founding the logic of inductive reasoning ,and also part of the scientific method.
It seems rovelli thinks it's not a risk to ignore this, and go on with the normal fuzzy meaning of probability - and note - thus also ignoring some risks in his reasoning. I don't share this risk assessment, I even think there is more physics hiding in this.
/Fredrik