Schrödinger's Kittens and the Search for Reality

In summary, the conversation discusses various books on quantum mechanics and the search for reality, with recommendations for books that explain the concepts without too much math. Some recommended books include "Quantum Mechanics and Experience" by David Albert, "Beyond Measure" by Jim Baggott, and "The Quantum Universe" by Tony Hey and Patrick Walters. The conversation also brings up the transactional interpretation of quantum mechanics and its compatibility with larger objects, as well as the idea that all models of reality are essentially fictions.
  • #1
Zardoz
10
0
Hey Guys,

I have read, Schrödinger's Kittens and the Search for Reality by John Gribbin and also "The Whole Shebang" by Timothy Ferris. I have also read a lot of books on Cosmology. What I'm looking for now is a book specifically on Quantum mechanics that is light on the math. (Only have a few years of University math a long time ago) Does anyone have any good ideas? If there is a thread already devoted to this just direct me there as I would not want to re-hash old infomation.

A book that tries to provide possible explanations to quantum weirdness.

Thanks

Zardoz
 
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  • #2
A book I always liked is Nick Herberts's Quantum Reality. Another in the same line is Heinz Pagel's The Quantum Code. Both of them try to do what you want, bring out the quantum weidness with reason. Pagels is maybe a little more uptight than Herbert; I understood he originally wrote his book to counter the influence of The Tao of Physics and The Dancing Wu Li Masters, which I DON'T recommend. Neither book has any math to speak of, but you do have to read carefully. Both of them are decades old now, but QM hasn't changed at all since then. Still the same issues - the measurement problem, the many worlds interpretation, and all the rest.
 
  • #3
Many Thanks
 
  • #4
Don't mention it. Have you read any of them?
 
  • #5
Some books with a little bit of math, but not too much:

David Albert - Quantum Mechanics and Experience

Jim Baggott - Beyond Measure: Modern Physics, Philosophy and the Meaning Of Quantum Theory

Tony Hey and Patrick Walters - The Quantum Universe

I especially like Baggott's book, but Hey and Walters is full of pictures and really gives you a good idea of what quantum experiments are like in the lab.
 
  • #6
slyboy said:
David Albert - Quantum Mechanics and Experience...

I read a book a decade or more ago that I think was authored by David Z. Albert. I am not sure if the title was the same as you listed. My recollection is that Albert was a professor of something like philosophy rather than physics. Can you confirm that? Is his physics writing considered reliable by the physicists here?
 
  • #7
See also:

Wick, David: "The Infamous Boundary", Birkhauser, Boston (1995),

and perhaps

Aczel, Amir D: "Entanglement: The greatest mystery in physics", Four Walls Eight Windows, New York (2001)

When it comes to the actual experiments supposed to show entanglement, though, neither author seems to have understood the importance of the various "loopholes" -- this despite (in Aczel's case) lengthy interviews with the people concerned. Both books are valuable for historical information but the only way to reach understanding is, I think, to look at reports of the actual experiments. The possibility remains open that there is little point in trying to understand entanglement, since maybe it simply does not happen!

Cat
 
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  • #8
The Transactional Interpretation.

Hello again,

I ended up reading John Gribbin's later book, "Schrödinger's Kittens and the search for Reality. At the end of his book he explains John Cramer's model of QM called "transactional interpretation" which is a clear easy way to conceptualize and understand these bizarre experimental results with light.

The only issue I have now is that in a Discover article (June 2005) about Roger Penrose they state they have had objects as large as buckyballs (soccer-ball-shaped carbon molecules) in a state of quantum superposition.

If anyone here has read John Gribbin's book or is familiar with "transactional interpretation" model could they tell me if this model is compatible with non photons. Works very well at clearing up all the bizarre photon interactions, but I don't see how it translates to larger objects.

Z.

… all models of the world beyond the reach of our immediate senses are fictions, free inventions of the human mind. … Reality is in a very large measure what you want it to be. Still, though, almost everybody wants to know ‘the answer’. The quest for a really real model is what drives theoretical physicists, just as it motivates other folk to study philosophy or to subscribe to a particular religion. I still have this hankering myself, even though the logical part of my mind tells me that the search is fruitless, and that all we can ever hope to find is a self-consistent myth for our times.



- John Gribbin
 
  • #9
Janitor said:
I read a book a decade or more ago that I think was authored by David Z. Albert. I am not sure if the title was the same as you listed. My recollection is that Albert was a professor of something like philosophy rather than physics. Can you confirm that? Is his physics writing considered reliable by the physicists here?

Yup, that's the same David Albert. He is in the philosophy dept at Columbia University. He has a PhD in physics, and has published a whole slew of important papers (on the foundations of quantum theory) in physics journals. Not only is his physics writing reliable, it is far, far more reliable than the writings of the vast majority of physicists on this same topic. If you want to really understand the foundational issues of quantum theory (the measurement problem, non-locality, hidden variables theories, many worlds, etc.) there is no better introduction than "Quantum Mechanics and Experience."
 
  • #10
Maybe take a look . Gribbin also wrote "In Search of Schrodinger's Cat: Quantam Physics and Reality" if you wanted to look at that as well.
 
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  • #11
Feynman's lecture, Quantum mechanics is a must-read !

It is very light on maths, not comparable to any other book on quantum mechanics, truly exceptional.

Personally, I did a lot of QM with all the maths, but I came to understand it after reading Feynman.
 
  • #12
ttn said:
Yup, that's the same David Albert. He is in the philosophy dept at Columbia University. He has a PhD in physics, and has published a whole slew of important papers (on the foundations of quantum theory) in physics journals. Not only is his physics writing reliable, it is far, far more reliable than the writings of the vast majority of physicists on this same topic. If you want to really understand the foundational issues of quantum theory (the measurement problem, non-locality, hidden variables theories, many worlds, etc.) there is no better introduction than "Quantum Mechanics and Experience."

I have to second that!
The David Z Albert book is an experience!..amazing.

I have a number of books mentioned in this thread, starting with :

John Gribbin:Shrodingers Kittens[not read yet]

Timothy Ferris:The whole Shebang [read-twice]

David Albert - Quantum Mechanics and Experience [read-twice]

Tony Hey and Patrick Walters - The Quantum Universe [not-read yet]

Probably the best introduction book for me personally, has been a little paperback I had given to me called:Observation and Interpretation in the Philosophy of Physics with special reference to Quantum Mechanics

it's a collection of writings by many author's.
 
  • #13
ttn said:
... Not only is his physics writing reliable, it is far, far more reliable than the writings of the vast majority of physicists on this same topic...

Glad to hear my time spent reading it was not wasted. :smile:
 
  • #14
Just wondering, any comments on the Book "The Elegant Universe"

Its quite publicised on the Shelves on physics on my side of the world..

Personally i find the details quite definitive. No equations though. I guess its just a light read as catered to newbies like me haha
 
  • #15
One more

I like

Understanding Quantum Mechanics by Roland Omnes

Some math but not too heavy.
 
  • #16
Physics Nobel Laureate Murray Gell-Mann's popular science book The Quark and the Jaguar has a very interesting couple of chapters on quantum physics. The book itself is on a wide variety of subjects but you will not find a greater physicist writing about fundamental physics than Gell-Mann here.
 
  • #17
Philosophy vs. physics

I read a book a decade or more ago that I think was authored by David Z. Albert. I am not sure if the title was the same as you listed. My recollection is that Albert was a professor of something like philosophy rather than physics. Can you confirm that? Is his physics writing considered reliable by the physicists here?

Most of the better technical books on the interpretation of quantum theory tend to be written by philosophers rather than physicists (although there are quite a number of bad books by philosophers as well). I suppose this is because they are trained to consider every possibility, and so they tend to give a clearer picture of the arguments for and against each interpretation. Physicists, on the other hand, are trained in an area where there is usually only one right answer (although there may be several ways of getting to it). Therefore, they sometimes end up pushing their own position as if it were the only viable alternative.

Other books by philosophers which I enjoyed are those by Jeff Bub, Michael Dickson and Tim Maudlin. They are quite a bit more technical than most of the books we have been discussing though.

Generally, the foundations of quantum theory is an area which is on the borders of both physics and philosophy. It is not really possible to completely disentangle the philosophy from the physics, although each field has its own particular emphasis. Therefore, I wouldn't say that a randomly chosen book by a philosopher is likely to be more or less accurate than a randomly chosen book by a physicist.
 
  • #18
Transactional Interpretation

If anyone here has read John Gribbin's book or is familiar with "transactional interpretation" model could they tell me if this model is compatible with non photons. Works very well at clearing up all the bizarre photon interactions, but I don't see how it translates to larger objects.

The basic problem with the transactional interpretation is that it only really works for single particle wavefunctions. It regards the wavefunction as a real wave in 3-dimensional space, but for multiple particles the wavefunction exists on configuration space and can't be reduced to a real wave on 3d space.

Therefore, the TI falls short of being a full-blown interpretation of QM because it cannot account for all observed phenomena. As a way of thinking about single-particle QM it is quite cute and maybe it can somehow be extended to the multi-particle case, but this has not been done yet.
 

1. What is the concept of Schrödinger's Kittens and the Search for Reality?

Schrödinger's Kittens and the Search for Reality is a thought experiment that explores the concept of quantum mechanics and how it relates to our understanding of reality. It is based on the famous paradox proposed by physicist Erwin Schrödinger, where a cat in a sealed box is both alive and dead at the same time until the box is opened and its state is observed.

2. How does this thought experiment relate to quantum mechanics?

The thought experiment of Schrödinger's Kittens is a way to explain the principles of quantum mechanics, such as superposition and the uncertainty principle. It challenges our traditional understanding of reality and demonstrates the strange and counterintuitive nature of the quantum world.

3. What is the significance of the kittens in this thought experiment?

The kittens in this thought experiment represent the observer, and the box represents the quantum system. Just like the cat's state is undefined until the box is opened and observed, the state of a quantum system is also undefined until it is measured or observed.

4. Is Schrödinger's Kittens and the Search for Reality a real experiment?

No, Schrödinger's Kittens is a thought experiment and not a real experiment. It was proposed by Erwin Schrödinger as a way to illustrate the principles of quantum mechanics and is not meant to be performed in a laboratory.

5. How does this thought experiment impact our understanding of reality?

Schrödinger's Kittens challenges our traditional understanding of reality and shows that the laws of quantum mechanics can be very different from the laws of classical physics that govern our everyday lives. It forces us to question the nature of reality and our perceptions of the world around us.

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