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What are the weak points of QM?Elias1960 said:..... are the weak points of QM.
What are the weak points of QM?Elias1960 said:..... are the weak points of QM.
Depends on the interpretation. For most interpretations, the measurement problem. The quite general problem of incompatibility with common sense. For some interpretations, the classical limit is a problem too. For others, Schrödinger's cat is problematic. Then, incompatibility of many things with relativistic principles. Here one can blame relativity instead, but most prefer to blame quantum theory.Lord Jestocost said:What are the weak points of QM?
Then the "interpretations" have weak points, don't blame QM!Elias1960 said:Depends on the interpretation.
Elias1960 said:If it would need a preferred frame, it would be rejected as Lorentz ether crackpot nonsense.
Elias1960 said:The point is that such a theory can be constructed in a quite simple way.
First, destroy relativistic symmetry. Add some term to the Lagrangian which destroys covariance and prefers some coordinates. Then you already have a GR variant as a field theory on R4\mathbb{R}^4. GR in harmonic gauge would be the most plausible candidate.
Then, use a lattice regularization. With a small enough lattice distance on a big enough cube this will not lead to any problem with GR in our observable universe. Don't care about renormalization, use the lattice regularization as a theory itself. It is a well-defined theory with a finite number of degrees of freedom.
Then use canonical quantization to quantize it. The result is a well-defined theory of quantum gravity compatible with all existing empirical evidence. Which is anathema because it destroys, by construction, relativistic symmetry. No chance to publish it.
Ok, add "and a condensed matter interpretation of the fields":PeterDonis said:Go search arxiv.org for papers that use the term "preferred frame". You will find plenty that have been published. "Preferred frame" and "Lorentz ether theory" are not the same thing. The latter is what is off limits for discussion here.
If it would need a preferred frame and a condensed matter interpretation of the fields, it would be rejected as Lorentz ether crackpot nonsense.
Once you ask for evidence that such a paper would be rejected, here is a reference to a publication of such a thing in a no-name journal. I would guess to discuss the paper itself would be forbidden here, because the journal is dubious, therefore the spoiler and the clarification that this is given only to give evidence for my claim that such a theory would be rejected by established journals.PeterDonis said:Have you tried to publish such a theory? Can you point us to a preprint on arxiv.org of a paper describing such a theory that was submitted for publication and rejected?
Either give us some evidence to back up your claims or stop making them.
Elias1960 said:I would guess to discuss the paper itself would be forbidden here
Where?PeterDonis said:Not because of its general subject matter, but because the views of its author (Ilja Schmelzer) are already well known here and have been discussed ad nauseam, and at this point nobody wants to rehash them again.
Do you think one example is not enough to clarify that this particular type of theory is anathema? Punish one, teach a hundred. Physicists are not stupid, and they know that they have to look for new grants in near future.PeterDonis said:Do you have any other examples?
Elias1960 said:Where?
Elias1960 said:Do you think one example is not enough to clarify that this particular type of theory is anathema?
Elias1960 said:I thought one is completely sufficient to justify my remarks above
Elias1960 said:Physicists are not stupid, and they know that they have to look for new grants in near future.
Nothing wrong with trying to interpret anything better, You may build a bridge that crosses the knowledge river but there may be a better bridge that someone can build, better may mean stronger, cheaper, simpler, a tunnel under or learn to fly and no bridge at all. The question here is does philosophy play a role crossing this river at all?AlexCaledin said:It seems that there are two mainstream QMs:
1. The QM working in the practice of the people who need it to understand very practical things, such as semiconductor properties or chemical behavior.
2. The QM as it seen by people driven by some ambition to interpret it better.
Sorry for disturbing this thread again, but using this search feature I was unable to identify any thread where the theories of Schmelzer have been "discussed ad nauseam".PeterDonis said:Try the forum search feature.
I don't know where he stands now, but he was the one who came up with the idea of the Relational quantum mechanics interpretation.atyy said:Isn't Rovelli a supporter of shut up and calculate?
Elias1960 said:Maybe I have not found some essential threads?
"Interpretational problems" are not physical problems. The least what you call "common sense" is relevant for science. The natural sciences deal with objectively observable facts about nature, using quantitative precise measurements to investigate nature and describe it with quantitative mathematical models. Everything else is not within the realm of the natural sciences.Elias1960 said:Depends on the interpretation. For most interpretations, the measurement problem. The quite general problem of incompatibility with common sense. For some interpretations, the classical limit is a problem too. For others, Schrödinger's cat is problematic. Then, incompatibility of many things with relativistic principles. Here one can blame relativity instead, but most prefer to blame quantum theory.
It is not yet known whether the standard model has a mathematically consistent description. This is not even known for QED.vanhees71 said:The Standard Model of elementary particle physics, which is based on a consistent description of matter using relativistic quantum field theory.
I disagree. A lattice regularization defines a mathematically consistent description. You may argue that it does not have the symmetries you like, or even that it does not give in the continuous limit the theory one wants, say, because of something like a fermion doubling problem or so. But this does not change the point that lattice theories are, quite general and for quite arbitrary parameters, well-defined, consistent theories.A. Neumaier said:It is not yet known whether the standard model has a mathematically consistent description. This is not even known for QED.
... but of an approximation to the standard model only, not to the standard model as defined in the textbooks.Elias1960 said:A lattice regularization defines a mathematically consistent description.
Well, consistency means logically consistency, and this includes mathematical consistency.vanhees71 said:I talked about the SM as a physical theory, and there it's very successful and also mathematically sound in the sense of renormalized perturbation theory. Maybe the lack of a consistent math for a fully self-consistent interacting QFT is also a hint at how to find a more comprehensive formulation, though all attempts for the last 70 years or so failed so far :-(.
The weak point of QM is that it does not contain its own interpretation.Lord Jestocost said:Then the "interpretations" have weak points, don't blame QM!
If on follows Wilson, so what? Field theories are large distance approximations of unknown low distance theories, and using a lattice theory as a straightforward example for such a low distance theory is not worse than presenting nothing at all for the limit of very small distances.A. Neumaier said:... but of an approximation to the standard model only, not to the standard model as defined in the textbooks.
I would reformulate it in the following way: There is no straightforward interpretation of QT where it is a fundamental theory of everything.Demystifier said:The weak point of QM is that it does not contain its own interpretation.
Elias1960 said:Ok, add "and a condensed matter interpretation of the fields":
By interpretation, I mean claims on ontology (or on the lack thereof). Classical mechanics, for instance, has a clear ontology in the sense that particles have positions at any time, irrespective of their measurement. Relativity theory (in the Minkowski formulation) has an explicit claim on the lack of ontology, in the sense that space and time do not exist separately unless they are measured.vanhees71 said:Which physical theory contains its own interpretation? It's not clear to me, what you mean by this.
Elias1960 said:And there is the "classical part" where we can access information which quantum theory does not give...