Originally posted by Nereid
What's the current status of 'wave-particle' duality then?
so many layers to the onion!
it is one question to ask "how are physicists talking these days? what words do they use and how do they use key ones like particle?
it is another question to ask what nature is made of
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I will tell you what I think about nature, and say nothing of the semantic fashions of some group of physicists (relativists use words differently from particle theorists so one would even have to divide up the sample)
I think the sun is made of protons and electrons, a great stew of them, like caviar is made of fisheggs, and some other species of things too like helium nuclei, but mainly a great lot of protons and electrons.
And yet if I want to think more fundamentally I must say to myself NO those protons and electrons do not exist---they are just convenient mathematical approximations that I am using to help me think about the sun.
So if I want to think more fundamentally about the sun I must imagine fields. And the sun certainly does not live in flat Minkowski space!
So to mentally construct my picture I must begin with the gravitational field------a superposition of quantum states of the gravitational field.
On a representative quantum state of the gravitational field, I can picture lots of other fields defined. A typical quantum state (or network) provides enough geometry so that I can visualize other fields defined on it.
The way I define a field on a quantum state of gravity may actually be to place particle labels at individual nodes of the network, anyway I assume I have some proceedure maybe the one described in detail by Rovelli in Chapter 7 "Dynamics and Matter".
The general idea (Rovelli page 7)
"In Newtonian and special relativistic physics, if we take away the dynamical entities---particles and fields---what remains is spacetime. In general relativistic physics, if we take away the dynamical entities, nothing remains...
...physical entities---particles and fields---are not all immersed in space and moving in time. They do not live on spacetime; they live, so to say, on one another.
It is as if we had observed in the ocean many animals living on an island: animals on the island. Then we discover that the island itself is in fact a great whale. Not anymore animals on the island, just animals on animals."
So we have come full circle and I am using particles as labels to apply to nodes of a quantum state network. I picture one representative quantum state of the sun as a vast network with jillions of nodes and links----honeycombing the sun that I see---and this network describes first of all the curved geometry, and then, by the labels or colorings on it, it describes matter fields overlaying the geometry.
And I imagine a superposition of many of these quantum states all more or less the same but differing in random details, such that if I back off and don't look too carefully it will appear to be the familiar caviar stew of protons and electrons. The network picture blurs into the "normal" one.
And if I back off still more, I see the sun.
Well Nereid, you asked. That's particles as I see them---not as fundamental as fields but too useful to give up
