We make the world by participating in it

  • Thread starter bobsmith76
  • Start date
In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of the "collapse of the wave function" and its implications on the role of the observer in shaping reality. There is disagreement on whether the collapse is a real phenomenon or just a mental operation for simplifying descriptions.
  • #1
bobsmith76
336
0
This quote comes from Paul Davies Information and the Nature of Reality but is written by another author, not Davies:

This phenomenon, known as the “collapse of the wave function,” suggests that the observer plays some constitutive role in making the physical world become what we perceive it to be at the macrophysical level a collection of clearly defined and locatable objects.

I think they're really exaggerating. Yea, it might be true theoretically at some quantum level but I'm skeptical that this fact really makes a difference about reality. Let me know what you think.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
I don't call 'collapse' a 'phenomenon', as it has no observable implications.
 
  • #3
The collapse of the wavefunction is the signal that you've become part of the system. The guy in the next room doesn't know what state you've observed, he only knows that you have become correlated with it. Until you tell him, then he becomes correlated.
 
  • #4
@Bill-K:
A signal?
Signal is a bit of information sent by someone to be received by someone else.
How do you receive a "collapse signal"?
 
  • #5
I think by "signal" he just means "signature". So if you see something you interpret as a collapse to a specified definite outcome, it means your participation in that system has become in some way decisive about how you will describe that system. To the many-worlds proponent, it means you have gotten so entangled into that system that you can no longer see it clearly (you don't see its unitarity or its "many worlds" character). To the CI proponent, it means you are the one who is using language about that system, it is something that has a reality for you because you are experiencing it (so being "part of the system" has a kind of reverse implication from MWI-- instead of losing contact with the full system, in CI the collapse is how you gain contact with that system). To the deBB proponent, it means you have discovered a truth about that system that had previously been kept from your awareness (so becoming "part of the system" here means joining those who are "in the know" about that system, but that information was already true about that system even if it had never been culled out from the other coherent possibilities via contact with the measuring apparatus).
 
  • #6
@Ken-G:
please!
tell the same in words understandable to humble layperson, rather than making relations: "signal"->"signature", and "collapse" -> ~"entanglement", etc.

I feel like listening to a lecture on Hegel's philosophy...

Bertrand Russell's principle: "if the philosophical idea cannot be expressed in common words it must be crap"
[sorry - I can't find original B.R. quote - that's my back-translation to English...]
 
  • #7
I'm not sure about what distinctions between the word "signal" and "signature" you are asking me about. Is that distinction not perfectly clear? You interpreted "signal" as meaning information passing between two observers, it seems to me that Bill_K is just talking about how an observer can tell when they should consider themselves to be part of (or "correlated with") the system they are studying. That's the "signature" I'm talking about. The rest of the post was just to point out there is little agreement or demonstrability about just exactly what form that correlation takes.

Response to Russell-- that quote is basically crap, albeit from a great man. To see that, simply replace the word "philosophical" with the word "physical" or the word "mathematical." Now that makes it perfectly clear does it not? Why would he think philosophy should be able to live up to a standard that physics and mathematics never do? He should have known better, since he knew a lot about all three.
 
Last edited:
  • #8
Both words "signal" and "signature" mean that some information is to be transferred: intentionally - for 'signal' or discovered from 'signature'. The information may be obtained from the object being a 'signal' or 'signature'.

The idea of 'collapse' is not associated with any information flow between its 'cause' and the 'collapsed object'. It may be only used as a measure of our (yet external observer's) knowledge about the system.
 
  • #9
xts said:
Both words "signal" and "signature" mean that some information is to be transferred: intentionally - for 'signal' or discovered from 'signature'. The information may be obtained from the object being a 'signal' or 'signature'.
Well, I have no real idea what distinction you are objecting to, by my point is simply that you can tell when you are part of a system when you perceive that the system has undergone a collapse, collapse is the signature of becoming part of what you are studying. As you are the only intelligent agent in that story, there is no "signal" passing between intelligent agents there.
The idea of 'collapse' is not associated with any information flow between its 'cause' and the 'collapsed object'. It may be only used as a measure of our (yet external observer's) knowledge about the system.
I believe the point Bill_K is making is that when the collapse is perceived, we are not "yet external" any more, that is just exactly when we are "now internal" to what we are studying. If that is what he meant, I agree with him.
 
  • #10
I am not making any distinction (relevant for this discussion) between "signal" and "signature" - I am just objecting against using any of those words in context of "observation" or "collapse of wavefunction".

Let me express it that way:
- "collapse" is nothing happening in real world - it means it cannot be detected or measured if the "collapse" happened or not;
- "collapse" is an operation we do mentally to simplify our further description of the object: as soon as we got know the value of some parameter, we substitute it into the formulae describing the world, making it simpler and easier for further calculations.
 
  • #11
xts said:
"collapse" is an operation we do mentally to simplify our further description of the object: as soon as we got know the value of some parameter, we substitute it into the formulae describing the world, making it simpler and easier for further calculations.
I'm fine with that, and Bill_K might be too. I don't see any conflict between what you are saying here, and his point (if I interpreted it correctly) that any time we find that collapse is the operation we are doing, we can take that as a "signal" or "signature" that we are becoming part of (or correlated with) what we are trying to study.
 
  • #12
OK then ;)

I just object about words like "signal" as they lead to misunderstandings.
You (Bill_K?) understand "signal" as something affecting your own mind.
In my meaning (well, I may be biased, I work for telecom industry...) the "signal" means something real, carrying information, sent by one party to be received by another party.
 
  • #13
xts said:
I just object about words like "signal" as they lead to misunderstandings.
You (Bill_K?) understand "signal" as something affecting your own mind.
In my meaning (well, I may be biased, I work for telecom industry...) the "signal" means something real, carrying information, sent by one party to be received by another party.
That's exactly why I suggested "signature" instead, because it didn't seem to carry that connotation for me. But we all agree (if Bill_K does) that we are just talking about the thought processes of a single intelligent agent who is doing physics here, so the words simply need clarification.
 
  • #14
I don't like 'signature' either.

"Signature" is something existing independently from the signer, attached to signed object, which may be objectively tested by anybody. It carry information, which may be used by others than signer.

In your meaning (the meaning we agreed...) there is no information flow between you and anybody else.
 
  • #15
I agree, to me it doesn't make any sense. Anyway, that said 'phenomenon' is the basis of the Schrodinger's cat idea, that says that the cat is in a position of being alive and dead at the same time, until an observer sees if the cat is alive or dead, collapsing the function. The thing i don't understand is that an observer to the incident somehow has some role in dictating that the cat is alive or dead. an observer should not be necessary in the result of the cat surviving or dying. Anyway, that is my take on the idea, in a different perspective of Schrodinger's cat rather than your example.
 
  • #16
If you take 'collapse' as nothing real, but describing your knowledge, then there is nothing weird in fact that you don't know if cat is alive or dead, but opening the box you gather this knowledge. Nothing real happens to the cat at the moment of opening the box (except that, if he is alive, he finally regain hope for some whiskas).
It is your knowledge about cat what changes, not the cat himself.
 
  • #17
xts said:
If you take 'collapse' as nothing real, but describing your knowledge, then there is nothing weird in fact that you don't know if cat is alive or dead, but opening the box you gather this knowledge. Nothing real happens to the cat at the moment of opening the box (except that, if he is alive, he finally regain hope for some whiskas).
It is your knowledge about cat what changes, not the cat himself.


Yes. what I am saying is i don't see why human (or other means of) observation collapses the function of why the cat is both alive and dead. The means of observation collapses the function of whether or not the cat is alive or dead. the cat should never have been alive and dead. Human observation should not be neccesary for the cat being alive or dead. It is only necessary for the cat to be known if it is alive or dead. Long story short, the cat is either alive or dead. human observation is only needed to know which one it is; not to MAKE it alive or dead.
 
  • #18
xts said:
I don't like 'signature' either.

"Signature" is something existing independently from the signer, attached to signed object, which may be objectively tested by anybody. It carry information, which may be used by others than signer.

In your meaning (the meaning we agreed...) there is no information flow between you and anybody else.
But "signature" has a more general meaning. You are thinking like a web signature, or a signature on a document. Often, "signature" is used as a synonym to "fingerprint." That's the way I mean it-- the signature, or fingerprint, that an observer has become part of the system is the appearance of a collapse. It can be the observer themself that notices this fingerprint, just as you can see your own fingerprints on a glass you are drinking from-- there is no implied connotation that information is being sent to someone else.
 
  • #19
In all those meanings 'signature' is some real property of the object, which may be objectively tested, rather than state of your mind. So it carries the information (regardless if the information had been intentionally sent or if its purpose is to be analysed).

It can be observer themself, that notice a fingerprint, but it may be also Sherlock Holmes who find it. That is a fundamental difference between 'signals', 'signatures', 'fingerprints', etc, and 'collapse'. The 'collapse' - in the meaning we agreed before - may not be detected by anybody else than observer. So it is not a property of the object - it is rather property of observer.

So if you like metaphore with fingers and traces - it is rather not a fingerprint you leave on a glass, but dirt on fingers you get touching something something.
 
  • #20
xts said:
In all those meanings 'signature' is some real property of the object, which may be objectively tested, rather than state of your mind.
The state of my mind may also be objectively tested. It can also be perceived, by me. That is all that is required to identify a "signature" that I have become part of what I am studying.
So it carries the information (regardless if the information had been intentionally sent or if its purpose is to be analysed).
Yes, of course-- collapse carries the information that I have become part of the system. It carries that information to me, and to anyone else who enters the same system.
It can be observer themself, that notice a fingerprint, but it may be also Sherlock Holmes who find it. That is a fundamental difference between 'signals', 'signatures', 'fingerprints', etc, and 'collapse'.
Actually, I think the Sherlock Holmes analogy works fine here-- someone else can determine that I have witnessed a collapse. I can tell them I did, or they can even infer that I did based on their own experiences in similar situations. The signature is there for any to see.
The 'collapse' - in the meaning we agreed before - may not be detected by anybody else than observer.
But a key aspect of quantum mechanics is that if I perceive a collapse, and someone else enters the system too, they must see the same collapse I did. So the collapse can be detected by someone else too, and it is the same collapse.
So it is not a property of the object - it is rather property of observer.
It cannot be purely a property of the observer, or we would not have objectivity in quantum mechanics.
So if you like metaphore with fingers and traces - it is rather not a fingerprint you leave on a glass, but dirt on fingers you get touching something something.
Dirt that someone else can see too.
 
  • #21
The difference is:
Sherlock Holmes may find (examining the glass only) if it had been touched or not looking at the glass - you (who left the fingerprint) are no longer needed to distinguish between touched and untouched glasses.
In case of 'collapse' the trace is associated with you, not with the object. Sherlock may interrogate you to find if you know something about the glass, but it cannot detect anything examining only the glass itself.

Dirt that someone else can see too.
yes, and it is my point: the dirt is detectable, but not by examining the object, but rather you. 'Collapse' is a change made by examined object to observer, while 'fingerprint' is something opposite: change made by observer to the object.
 
  • #22
xts said:
In case of 'collapse' the trace is associated with you, not with the object. Sherlock may interrogate you to find if you know something about the glass, but it cannot detect anything examining only the glass itself.
I don't see that, if I do an experiment and don't look at the result, I'll have to treat the outcome as a mixed state, even though I can imagine that something definite happened and I just don't know yet, if I'm using CI. Thus I can treat myself as though I was part of that system, even if I am not actually part of that system, because that is the characteristic of macroscopic systems-- there is just one coherent macroscopic world that we interact with, remember, and communicate within. Similarly, if my collaborator comes in and records the outcome, not knowing if I have already done so or not, it doesn't change their impression of the situation whether I looked or didn't look. The fingerprint is on the apparatus simply by virtue of being a measuring device-- by making itself "part of the system", it collapsed that system for all of us (not in the sense of some physical effect, but in the sense of our decisions about how we are treating the action of that measuring device), we needn't collapse it again for ourselves (we'd have a big objectivity problem if that were not true).
'Collapse' is a change made by examined object to observer, while 'fingerprint' is something opposite: change made by observer to the object.
I feel that relationship is a two-way street, the direction of the relationship is highly ambiguous and possibly unknowable.
 
  • #23
What does it mean to observe or measure something?

A measurement is the act of determining the value of some observable. But this means the system is left in a state where the uncertainty of the observable vanishes, yes?

Generally whatever the state of the system before measurement, at the time of measurement the system must be in a state of zero-uncertainty:

[tex]\triangle O = 0[/tex]

Every observable is associated with a Hermitian operator so a state of zero uncertainty must have the property:

[tex](\triangle O)^2 = < \phi | (O - <O>)^2 | \phi > = 0 [/tex]

Define operator D as

[tex] D \equiv O - \lambda [/tex]

Where

[tex]
\lambda = < O >
[/tex]

By using the hermiticity of D:

[tex] ( \triangle O)^2 = < \phi | (D)^2 | \phi >
= < \phi | D | D\phi >
= < \phi | D | \phi ' >
= < D\phi | \phi ' >
= < \phi ' | \phi ' >
= \int dx \phi '*(x)\phi '(x)
[/tex]

Now if:

[tex] \triangle O = 0 [/tex]

Then:

[tex] ( \triangle O)^2 = \int dx \phi^{'*}(x)\phi '(x)
[/tex]

And since

[tex]
\phi^{'*}(x)\phi '(x) \geq 0
[/tex]

for all x

[tex]

0 = \phi '(x)
= D\phi (x)
= [O - \lambda]\phi (x)

[/tex]

So for a zero-uncertainty state we have

[tex] O\phi (x) = \lambda\phi (x) [/tex]

This is an Eigenvalue equation. The state does not collapse because we measure it, we simply define an ideal measurement as zero-uncertainty, a collapsed state. Looking at a finger print on a window is not even an ideal measurement.
 
Last edited:
  • #24
Ken G said:
xts said:
So it is not a property of the object - it is rather property of observer.
It cannot be purely a property of the observer, or we would not have objectivity in quantum mechanics.
I would agree the collapse is related the observer. A possible resolution to Ke's issue
is to consider the proper interaction, and evolution.

Apparent objectivity as in "agreement between observers" is accomplished since the observers are TUNED.

In my view, the tuning takes place when observers are interacting and the objectivity is emergent on part with a negotiation process.

The important distinction which is again at the heart of this matter is wether we understand "objectivity" as a kind of mathematical CONSTRAINT or wether it is a RESULT or like a kind ot equilibrium. Thus the "observer objectivity" is possibly more like a property of the steady state population of the observers (read structure of matter).

/Fredrik
 

1. What does it mean to "make the world by participating in it"?

The phrase "make the world by participating in it" refers to the concept that as individuals, our actions and choices contribute to shaping the world around us. It emphasizes the idea that we are not passive observers, but active participants in creating the world we live in.

2. How does participating in the world impact our lives?

Participating in the world can have a significant impact on our lives. Our interactions and contributions to society can shape our relationships, opportunities, and overall well-being. Additionally, our actions can also have a ripple effect, influencing others and the world in ways we may not even realize.

3. What role do individual choices play in making the world?

Individual choices play a crucial role in making the world. Every decision we make, no matter how small, can have an impact on the world around us. Our choices can influence the environment, economy, society, and more. As individuals, we have the power to shape the world through our actions.

4. Is it possible to make a positive impact on the world as an individual?

Absolutely. While it may seem daunting to think about changing the world as one person, our individual actions and choices can add up to make a significant impact. Whether it's through volunteering, advocating for a cause, or simply being kind to others, each of us has the power to make a positive difference in the world.

5. How can we use this concept to create a better world?

We can use the concept of "making the world by participating in it" as motivation to take action and create a better world. By being mindful of our choices and how they impact others, we can strive to make more positive and impactful decisions. Additionally, we can encourage and inspire others to do the same, creating a ripple effect of positive change.

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
1K
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
8
Views
1K
Replies
21
Views
2K
Replies
19
Views
1K
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
17
Views
1K
  • Classical Physics
Replies
21
Views
1K
  • Quantum Interpretations and Foundations
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • Quantum Interpretations and Foundations
Replies
25
Views
1K
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • STEM Career Guidance
Replies
13
Views
2K
Back
Top