Len M said:
I’m not sure I would use the term “choose” here.
But there are always choices. First we choose the kinds of things we will measure, like position and energy, which is really a choice in how we will measure them (the rest is just labeling).
We have found certain types of things are "empirical", and that is what we have chosen to base physics on. Those choices begin to shape what physics is, it doesn't somehow exist independently of them. It's true we cannot choose to measure what we cannot measure, but we can, and do, choose to measure what we can measure, and that's what gives us quantum mechanics. This is a point I feel Bohr was absolutely right about-- our fingerprints are all over quantum mechanics, and so we must not be surprised when we encounter observer dependent effects-- they are the effects of our choice to be empirical.
The “super physicist” (and by this d’Espagnat is referring to a “being” that transcends our abilities) on the other hand would be able to measure all of the predicted outcomes, so for them their mixture is different to ours.
I feel the "super physicist" is a problematic construction. This physicist is making fundamentally different choices about what to track, what to care about, and what to ignore, what to average over. They are not doing physics better than us, they are doing different physics. We have no idea what physics would look like for them-- for example, we have no idea if quantum mechanics would work. This is the problem that people had in Newton's day when they thought the universe was completely deterministic-- they imagined a "super physicist" that could measure the exact position and velocity of every particle, and had the computing power to extrapolate forward Newton's laws for an arbitrary amount of time, and predict everything that happens-- only trouble is, Newton's laws emerged from making the choice
not to do exactly that, and Newton's laws simply don't work if you do try to do that-- Newton's laws are not the laws of the "super physicist." So why should quantum mechanical laws be? We always make the mistake of thinking the laws we got from certain choices of how to do physics would still work if we made different choices.
The only point of d’Espagnat’s argument is to establish that decoherence does not restore realism, as some would have it. The outcomes of decoherence are linked to the abilities (or lack of them) of us as observers.
Yes, that I agree with completely. I'm just saying that our choices are also linked to our abilities, and so is physics itself. There's really no such thing as decoherence as a physical truth, decoherence is a choice about how we do physics-- we have chosen what not to track, and that choice leads to what we call decoherence. In actual truth, it seems everything is coherence, there's no "de" until we make choices the "super physicist" is not making. I'm just saying if we don't make those choices, we have something more than just different observations-- we have different physics. (A classical example of this same effect is the second law of thermodynamics, which applies even when all the fundamental laws of physics are completely time reversible, so the second law stems not from the world itself but from our choices about how to describe the world-- what to track, what we choose to care about. D'Espagnat's "super physicist" has no second law of thermodynamics, so that's something
different from physics as we know it.)
I think I understand your point though - the physics done by us is the same as that done by the “super physicist”, the only difference being the ability of the “super physicist” to measure all of the predicted outcomes. From this vantage point, the physics in both cases involve an intelligence.
More than that-- the physics is determined by the intelligence, and a vastly different intelligence, making fundamentally different choices about what to care about, ends up with a vastly different physics. We can ask what kind of "physics" an artist commune would come up with, for example-- you might argue it wouldn't be physics at all, but that's just my point.
I think d’Espagnet is simply providing a means to show that decoherence cannot be taken on board by realists as defence of their philosophy, because the formalism of decoherence points to differing outcomes from a “super physicist” and from that of humans – the mixture we have access to (the improper mixture) cannot be thought of as being in that form independently of our involvement, rather it refers to our involvement.
Yes, I agree with him there, I am noting the connection between the words "involvement" and "choices of what to care about." When we do that, the whole concept of the "super physicist" becomes questionable, but we can say it is merely a device to make a similar point. I do think it is quite important to recognize, though, that we would not view that person as a "super" physicist, we would view them as a
bad physicist, or at least a
different one. They wouldn't have anything to tell us that we would understand, their physics would sound excruciatingly tedious when passed through our different choices about what to care about-- like if you were reading a suspense novel and in the pivotal scene the author decided to describe in painstaking detail the location of every particle of dust in the room as the bad guy was chasing the heroine with a knife!
You personally perhaps might say that in any event, realists could not take decoherence as a defence of their philosophy because all of physics stems from the observer and intelligence.
Actually, I would say that this is why realists
can take decoherence as a defence of their philosophy-- they just couldn't take it as a defence of the absence of a need for philosophy, or the absence of a need for making choices. I would say the choices a realist makes only work because of decoherence, but that doesn't make them "right," because a choice is something kind of opposite of being right. Physics involves a lot of intentional choices to be wrong-- but wrong about the things that do not seem to matter to us. I would say that is not a bad definition of physics-- the careful separation of things to be wrong about from things to be right about so as to achieve some simplifying purpose.
My point of posting this was to refute an earlier post that suggested the process of decoherence was independent of us as human observers and practitioners.
Yes, and compared to that overarching point, I am perhaps nitpicking, but I feel it is an important distinction to make. We must not embrace the concept of observer dependence without also embracing all of the ways we leave our fingerprints on our physics.
In terms of an ensemble E of N systems consisting of an electron- atom composition, we can express the state of each system as being of the form aA + bB.
Not to belabor the point, but a more correct way to say that is we can
choose to express the state that way-- that is
not really going to be the state, we already know that, but we can't do physics theory on the real state, our only access to the real state is via observation and even that requires making pertinent choices.
Now, in addition to the just described ensemble E, we also consider an ensemble E' consisting of strictly proper mixtures (d’espagnat is quite specific here in distinguishing proper from improper), of which N/2 systems are in state aA and N/2 systems are in bB.
OK, that's what he means by a proper mixture, but that brings up a problem-- normally our ensembles are of identical particles. Identical particles don't make proper mixtures, not even for "super physicists", because they are indistinguishable. This is quite important, it is the reason we have a periodic table of elements-- carbon acts much differently than oxygen because the extra electrons in oxygen couldn't be in the same states as the electrons in carbon, and the reason they couldn't is because they are indistinguishable from each other and indistinguishable Fermions (like electrons) cannot be in the same state. The indistinguishability means that all the electrons respond to a single wave function-- they don't have their own wave functions. But we usually make the choice to treat them as if they had their own wave functions, because it makes our physics doable. This is just an example of how problematic the "super physicist" construct is, it's not formally consistent with how physics works. In summary, what I'm saying is that his points about an "improper mixture" are valid, but can be addressed simply by pointing to how this concept emerges from how we choose to do physics. There is not actually any such thing as a "proper mixture" that a "super physicist" would have access to, which speaks to the dangers of assuming we know anything about what the "super physicist" would perceive. It cuts to the heart of
interpretations of quantum mechanics-- some hold that the wave function is real, and is accessible to "super physicists" (superpositions, not proper mixtures), others hold that the wave function is a tool for making calculations by physicists who have made the choice to accept something different from "super." As you can tell, I tend to hold to the latter camp.
D’Espagnat now takes this a step further in that he examines an ensemble consisting of N electron-atom-molecule systems. When we apply the quantum formalism to this ensemble, it is the case that we can deliberately ignore the practical and possible measurements (other than the trivial ones) on the atom-electron system, but we have no choice but to ignore all of the predicted measurements on the atom-molecule system since we will never, ever be able to measure them given the degree of complexity involved.
Perhaps here we are saying something similar in different ways. If someone holds gun to my head and says "give me all your money", I might say I have "no choice" but to do it. Or, I might simply say I am making the choice to do it because it is clearly the best option I have available! The latter is more how I am talking about our physics, but I think the main point is the same-- we do physics a certain way, and that way determines how our physics comes out. This is why Bohr said that physics is not about nature, it is about what we can say about nature. Thus the observer dependence is much more fundamental than is understood by those who try to rule out some kind of definite physical influence of the participation of a conscious mind, as in the linked paper above. I believe that is what you are saying D'Espagnat is also arguing-- I just don't like the "super physicist" device, because I think it is being used to establish a truth about physics by essentially ignoring that same truth!
This does not imply that in principle, the measurements could not be done, rather it implies that no humans will ever be able to do them.
The more important issue is that no humans would ever
want to do them, as they would not be doing a useful form of physics and might well end up with something that looks completely different than anything we would recognize as physics.
So, in terms of the abilities of humans, the ensemble of electron-atom-molecule systems residing in a pure state of aAA’ + bBB’ (where A’ and B’are the large molecules) will be transformed via decoherence into a mixture of N/2 states of aA and N/2 of states bB, providing we reference these outcomes specifically to our inabilities in carrying out the predicted very complex measurements.
This is essentially the von Neumann approach to describing measurement theory, which is the best we have, but since it has never been tested, it is not at all clear if we can really take the wave function of macroscopic systems that literally. It is what the formalism of quantum mechanics says, if we adopt the idealization that a macroscopic system can be isolated from its environment, but even then it is just like the way the formalism of Newtonian mechanics said particles have definite positions and momenta. I'm not sure if there is any physical significance in noting that this is what the formalism of quantum mechanics says. In other words, once we have agreed that the quantum mechanics we test is a quantum mechanics of improper mixtures, it is somewhat inconsistent to imagine that the "reality" of quantum mechanics deals with anything
but improper mixtures. Call it my empiricism peeking out.