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?ftr said:vanhees71, aren't you shooting superposition between the eyes.![]()
?ftr said:vanhees71, aren't you shooting superposition between the eyes.![]()
Ok I will elaborate ( I guess I am summarizing while multitasking my lifevanhees71 said:?
vanhees71 said:I always thought that "minimal statistical" and "ensemble" interpretations are just the name of the same interpretation. If not, what's the difference. Is this again one of these unnecessary confusions due to (unnecessary?) philosophical sophistry?
vanhees71 said:Oh come on, statistical and probablistic is really synonymous if it comes to the application of probability theory
vanhees71 said:The correlations are not caused by the measurements but are due to the correlation following from the preparation in an entangled state.
For a random quantum state on H=Cd⊗Cd obtained by partial tracing a random pure state on H⊗Cs, we consider the whether it is typically separable or typically entangled. For this problem, we show the existence of a sharp threshold s0=s0(d) of order roughly d3. More precisely, for any a>0 and for d large enough, such a random state is entangled with very large probability when s<(1−a)s0, and separable with very large probability when s>(1+a)s0. One consequence of this result is as follows: for a system of N identical particles in a random pure state, there is a threshold k0=k0(N)∼N/5 such that two subsystems of k particles each typically share entanglement if k>k0, and typically do not share entanglement if k<k0. Our methods work also for multipartite systems and for "unbalanced" systems such as Cd⊗Cd′, d≠d′. The arguments rely on random matrices, classical convexity, high-dimensional probability and geometry of Banach spaces; some of the auxiliary results may be of reference value. A high-level non-technical overview of the results of this paper and of a related article arXiv:1011.0275 can be found in arXiv:1112.4582.
Nothing more about a particle than those who are brought to our consciousness. We human beings, let us be aware of the physical phenomena through our senses: f(r,t), g(sound, t), ...Demystifier said:Its pretty tough only if one does not accept that there is nothing more about a particle than a click in a detector.
it's not surprising: QBism and the GreeksDemystifier said:And guess what, many experts in the field do not accept it.
As I said, this definitely seems to be a foreign language speaker issue: the confusion arises from the stem 'certain-'; the word 'certainly' in this context has nothing directly to do with 'certainty', i.e. "certainly suggests" means "it is true that it suggests", which clearly is in contrast to "suggests (with) certainty", which means "suggests that it is true".A. Neumaier said:I'd say that "suggests" and "makes plausible" are synonymous. But there is nothing certain in a plausibility argument. The appropriate wording in the sentence would have been ''suggests to me'',
since plausibility is in the eye of the beholder.
Statistical and probabilistic are not synonymous. Statistics is an empirical methodology based largely on (certain forms of) probability theory, while probability theory is a field in mathematics such as geometry.vanhees71 said:Oh come on, statistical and probablistic is really synonymous if it comes to the application of probability theory to real-world problems, and QT is also a kind of probability theory.
This is not confusion due to philosophical sophistry, but more confusion due to a wrongly assumed equivalence relation between two different classes/sets: the relation between the elements of the set of statistics and the elements of the set of applications of probability theory is not bijective; the latter set is far larger than the former and moreover, the former set has relations with other formal domains as well, e.g. logic.vanhees71 said:I always thought that "minimal statistical" and "ensemble" interpretations are just the name of the same interpretation. If not, what's the difference. Is this again one of these unnecessary confusions due to (unnecessary?) philosophical sophistry?
Your suspicions are of course warranted: entanglement is ubiquitous, almost all quantum states in Nature are entangled states, but decoherence of course breaks these entanglements, which of course is why building a quantum computer is such an engineering challenge.Jimster41 said:You make it sound like entanglement is some rare artificially induced thing, and therefore non-locality ("a-causality" is a term I have heard applied) between entangled elements just an exotic oddity - philosophically curious.
But I've always been confused about where entanglement is naturally found. Is it natural and ubiquitous in addition to being an isolated laboratory phenomenon? I mean isn't it natural and ubiquitous?
but wouldn't that make it possible to have a frame in which the two events occurs simultaneously? even though the two frames can't be Lorentz connected?vanhees71 said:event A can only be the cause of event B if it is time- or light-like separated from B and B is within or on the future light cone of A
Demystifier said:They can accept its truth, but not its completeness. They want to know what happens behind the curtain.
On the other hand, those who are satisfied with the purely epistemic interpretation either
(i) don't care about things behind the curtain, or
(ii) care a little bit but don't think that it is a scientific question, or
(iii) claim that there is nothing behind the curtain at all.
Those in the category (i) have a mind of an engineer, which would be OK if they didn't claim that they are not engineers but scientists. Those in the category (ii) often hold double standards because in other matters (unrelated to quantum foundations) they often think that questions about things behind the curtain are scientific. Those in the category (iii) are simply dogmatic, which contradicts the very essence of scientific way of thinking.
All other scientific accounts of phenomena ever given so far have ultimately turned out to be dynamical. Because the question is still mathematically wide open, i.e. the correct mathematical description to fully describe the problem has not yet been found or proven to not exist, the question is currently an open question in mathematical physics.RUTA said:I believe there is nothing behind the curtain, not because it's irrelevant, but because there really is no thing behind the curtain and there is no dynamical story to tell. QM is providing an adynamical constraint on the distribution of momentum exchange in spacetime without a dynamical counterpart. How is that unscientific? Must all scientific explanation be dynamical?
Auto-Didact said:All other scientific accounts of phenomena ever given so far have ultimately turned out to be dynamical. Because the question is still mathematically wide open, i.e. the correct mathematical description to fully describe the problem has not yet been found or proven to not exist, the question is currently an open question in mathematical physics.
The very fact that Bohmian mechanics even exists at all and may even be made relativistic, is proof that this is a distinctly scientific open problem of theoretical physics within the foundations of QM, let alone the existence of alternate theories waiting to be falsified experimentally and the existence of the open problem of quantum gravity.
It is therefore by all accounts vehemently shortsighted and extremely premature to decide based upon our best experimental knowledge that a dynamical account is a priori impossible; the experimental knowledge itself literally indicates no such thing, instead this is a cognitive bias coming from direct extrapolation of our effective models to arbitrary precision.
vanhees71 said:in my understanding, causality implies a specific time-ordering
vanhees71 said:In other words event A can only be the cause of event B if it is time- or light-like separated from B and B is within or on the future light cone of A.
vanhees71 said:It's not clear to me, how you define causality to begin with.
vanhees71 said:due to microcausality there is no cause-effect relation between space-like separated measurement events
vanhees71 said:In this case the entanglement is due to selection (or even post-selection!) of a subensemble out of an before (in the correct relativistic sense!) created system of two entangled (but not among them entangled) photon pairs. Note however that each of these pairs have been created in an entangled state by causal local interaction (SPDC of a laser photon in a BBO crystal).
kent davidge said:wouldn't that make it possible to have a frame in which the two events occurs simultaneously?
kent davidge said:even though the two frames can't be Lorentz connected?
There are more than one point on which your position is unscientific.RUTA said:I believe there is nothing behind the curtain, not because it's irrelevant, but because there really is no thing behind the curtain and there is no dynamical story to tell. QM is providing an adynamical constraint on the distribution of momentum exchange in spacetime without a dynamical counterpart. How is that unscientific? Must all scientific explanation be dynamical?
It's scientific to say: Maybe there is nothing behind the curtain, it seems very likely to me that it is so.RUTA said:I believe there is nothing behind the curtain, not because it's irrelevant, but because there really is no thing behind the curtain and there is no dynamical story to tell. QM is providing an adynamical constraint on the distribution of momentum exchange in spacetime without a dynamical counterpart. How is that unscientific? Must all scientific explanation be dynamical?
Where did I say this? Entanglement is the rule rather than the exception. Alone from the fact that we have indistinguishable particles and thus Bose or Fermi symmetric/anti-symmetric Fock spaces leads to a lot of entanglement.Jimster41 said:You make it sound like entanglement is some rare artificially induced thing, and therefore non-locality ("a-causality" is a term I have heard applied) between entangled elements just an exotic oddity - philosophically curious.
No, for time- or lightlike events the time ordering is the same in any frame (of course in SRT; in GR it's more complicated and it holds only in a local sense).kent davidge said:but wouldn't that make it possible to have a frame in which the two events occurs simultaneously? even though the two frames can't be Lorentz connected?
Causality is not vague but a fundamental assumption underlying all physics. Locality is another case since there a lot of confusion arises from the fact that too often people don't distinguish between causal effects and (predetermined) correlations. This becomes particularly problematic when it comes to long-range correlations between entangled parts of a quantum system.PeterDonis said:Yes, but that's a statement about your preferred use of ordinary language, not about physics. We all agree on the physics: we all agree that spacelike separated measurements commute and that such measurements on entangled quantum systems can produce results that violate the Bell inequalities. It would be nice if the discussion could just stop there, but everyone insists on dragging in vague ordinary language terms like "causality" and "locality" and arguing about whether they are appropriate terms to use in describing the physics that we all agree on.
Indeed, ignoring weak interactions the Standard Model is T-invariant. Nevertheless the S-matrix provides a time ordering. You define an initial state (usually two asymptotic free particles) and then look for the transition probability rate to a given final state. This reflects how we can do experiments, and there's always this time ordering: Preparation of a state and then measuring something. T invariance then just means that (at least in principle) the "time-reversed process" is also possible and leads to the same S-matrix elements.Where does this requirement show up in QFT? QFT is time symmetric.
I don't understand, what's unclear about this. To motivate the microcausality constraint, which is usually also called locality of interactions, you need the causality principle, and in Q(F)T it's even a weak one, i.e., you need to know only the state at one point in time to know it, given the full dynamics or Hamiltonian of the system, to any later point in time, i.e., it's causality local in time. You don't need to know the entire history before one "initial point" in time.The same way you've been defining it (you sometimes use the term "microcausality", but sometimes not): that spacelike separated measurements commute. But now you seem to be shifting your ground and giving a different definition of "causality" (the one I quoted above), the basis of which in QFT I don't understand (which is why I asked about it).
Microcausality ensures that there are no faster-than-light causal connections. Given the general causality assumption that's a necessary consequence: Two space-like separated events do not define a specific time order and thus one event cannot be the cause of the other.So microcausality means no causal relationship? That seems like an odd use of language.
Of course QFT admits entangled states. We write them down all the time discussing about photons. Measurements are just usual interactions between entities described by the fields, and due to microcausality they are local, i.e., there cannot be any causal influence of one measurment event on another measurement event that is space-like separated. I.e., if A's detector clicks this measurement event can not be the cause of anything outside of the future light cone of this event.The way I would describe all this is not that entangled pairs do not have to be causally connected. The way I would describe it is that QFT, strictly speaking, does not admit the concept of "an entangled pair", because it does not admit the concept of the "state" of an extended system at an instant of "time". It only admits measurement events and correlations between them, and it predicts the statistics of such correlations using quantum field operators that obey certain commutation relations. Each individual such operator is tied to a specific single event in spacetime: that's what makes it "local". Any talk about "entangled systems" measured at spacelike separated events is just an approximation and breaks down when you try to look too closely.
Of course, there are entangled states and there are the correspondingly observed strong correlations between far distant measurements, and all that is describable by relativistic QFT. It's also clear that the localizability also of massive particles, which have a position observable, is much more constrained in relativstic QFT than in non-relativistic QM since rather than localizing a particle better and better by "squeezing" it somehow in an ever smaller region in space you tend to create new particles.Again, this is all about how to describe things in ordinary language, not about physics. Basically many people do not like the extreme viewpoint I just described, which is IMO the proper consistent way to describe what QFT is saying. Many people do not want to give up the notion of "entangled systems" containing multiple spatially separated particles. But that notion IMO is a holdover from non-relativistic physics and needs to be given up in a proper account of what QFT says, if we are going to talk about how best to describe the physics in ordinary language and we aren't willing just to stop at the point of describing the physics in its most basic terms (which I gave at the start of this post).
Of course, QT provides a description of the dynamics of the system and the measurable quantities related with it. That's what QT is all about. I may be buried in many introductory courses, because students tend to get the impression that rather all there is are stationary states (i.e., eigenstates of the Hamiltonian), but that's only "statics" in a sense. Also in hydrodynamics or classical electrodynamics you can stick with static or stationary special cases, but still hydro as well as Maxwell theory are indeed descriptions of the dynamics of the described system (fluids and charges and the em. field, respectively).zonde said:So answering your question: "Must all scientific explanations be dynamical?" - yes, all scientific explanations must be dynamical because only testable explanations are scientific and the process of testing is dynamical, you have initial conditions and then you observe what happens and if your observations agree with predictions.
vanhees71 said:Note that in general the location of an entity described by QFT is determined by the location of a measurement device with a finite spatial resolution; it's not necessary that the measured systems have position observables, as the example of photons shows: All observable there is is that a detector located in some spatial region registers a photon or not.
I think it doesn't make sense. To see why, suppose that the universe contains only a hydrogen atom and nothing else. In the hydrogen atom, the electron interacts with the proton. Does it create the "form" of the electron?julcab12 said:Somewhat frozen image/depiction/description/detection of things that is always formless dynamic in nature --unless it interacts. That is exactly the view of Rovelli.
It doesn't say that. Well according to him. locality of quantum mechanics is by postulating relativity to the observer for events and facts, instead of an absolute “view from nowhere”. The main ontology of “observers”, measurement interactions and relative events. And, it doesn't say any form or becomes meaningless otherwise. Besides the only way to detect/picture a electron(seen as local) is through electron interacting.Demystifier said:I think it doesn't make sense. To see why, suppose that the universe contains only a hydrogen atom and nothing else. In the hydrogen atom, the electron interacts with the proton. Does it create the "form" of the electron?
I’m familiar with the two slit experiment etc. But to me it seems just as sensible to interpret the vave-like interference pattern seen by the detector(s) as “confirming” or “realizing” the non-locality of the quantum field, especially if new entangled states ensue - as opposed to describing it as “decoherence”. But that may be what you were getting at.Auto-Didact said:Your suspicions are of course warranted: entanglement is ubiquitous, almost all quantum states in Nature are entangled states, but decoherence of course breaks these entanglements, which of course is why building a quantum computer is such an engineering challenge.
But to make the argument even stronger, in textbook QM the description of ##\psi## is non-local whether or not entanglement is involved, i.e. even for a single particle wavefunction non-locality is already present in the following example given by Penrose about a decade ago or earlier:
Imagine a photon source and a screen some distance away and single photons are detected (or measured) as single points on the screen; in between source and screen is where the wavefunction is. Now imagine that there is a detector at each point of the screen; once the photon is detected at a single point on the screen we can call it a detection event.
Each single detection event on the screen instantaneously prohibits the photon from being seen anywhere else on the screen i.e. once a detection event takes place by a single detector, all other detectors are effectively instantaneously prohibited from detecting the photon; if the detector had to communicate this detection event to all the other detectors it would need to convey that information faster than light.
In other words, detection i.e. measurement itself breaks the non-locality of the wavefunction; this can be mathematically described in detail as measurements effectively removing the first cohomology element of single photon wavefunctions (NB: these photon wavefunctions are usually Fourier transformed wavefunctions, and together with their Fourier transforms reside in a larger abstract complex analytic mathematical space).
zonde said:There are more than one point on which your position is unscientific.
First, you believe in one true explanation. Just because you have an explanation that fits observations does not mean that there can't be other explanations.
Second, the process of gaining scientific knowledge is ... well a process, a dynamical story as you call it. What is the point of denying value of dynamical approach and then seeking justification for that from perspective of dynamical approach. It's stolen concept fallacy.
So answering your question: "Must all scientific explanations be dynamical?" - yes, all scientific explanations must be dynamical because only testable explanations are scientific and the process of testing is dynamical, you have initial conditions and then you observe what happens and if your observations agree with predictions.
Interesting.zonde said:It's stolen concept fallacy.
vanhees71 said:Causality is not vague
vanhees71 said:Locality is another case
vanhees71 said:the S-matrix provides a time ordering. You define an initial state (usually two asymptotic free particles) and then look for the transition probability rate to a given final state. This reflects how we can do experiments
vanhees71 said:Of course QFT admits entangled states. We write them down all the time discussing about photons
vanhees71 said:Measurements are just usual interactions between entities described by the fields, and due to microcausality they are local
vanhees71 said:there cannot be any causal influence of one measurment event on another measurement event that is space-like separated
vanhees71 said:a lot of confusion arises from the fact that too often people don't distinguish between causal effects and (predetermined) correlations.
They can only not be predetermined Bell-locally, by the latter's definition, as in your previous posts. But this is a tautology and means nothing.PeterDonis said:Correlations that violate the Bell inequalities can't be "predetermined" locally. That's what Bell's Theorem shows.