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- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Subject: Re: What does quantum have to do with it?
- Message-ID: <mcirvin.727663292@husc.harvard.edu>
- From: mcirvin@husc8.harvard.edu (Matt McIrvin)
- Date: 22 Jan 93 00:41:32 GMT
- References: <1993Jan21.145314.26759@oracorp.com>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: husc8.harvard.edu
- Lines: 78
-
- daryl@oracorp.com (Daryl McCullough) writes:
-
- >Scott of course is giving the standard line, that science is about
- >prediction, and any discussion that does not have empirical
- >consequences is therefore "wild speculation". I would prefer to use
- >the word "philosophy". I think that Scott has somewhere lost touch of
- >the purpose of science: besides the modern purpose of allowing us to
- >build bigger and better gadgets, there is the much more ancient
- >purpose of trying to understand the universe we live in. Experiment
- >should certainly play an important role in testing our understanding,
- >but it isn't an end in itself. And there are other tests of our
- >understanding: the coherence, consistency, and perhaps elegance of
- >our theories.
-
- Still, physicists will take a theory more seriously if one can
- cook up a potential way to test it. This is even the case for
- string theorists-- a subindustry in string theory seems to be the
- quest for experimental tests using, say, 25th-century technology
- instead of 159th-century technology. The ultimate goal is to find
- something truly feasible.
-
- I am much more sympathetic to the search for good interpretations of
- QM than are many physicists. The problem is that the search is
- sticky and time-consuming, and most physicists have enough interesting
- things to work on as it is. Research in the subject should go on,
- but we shouldn't expect all physicists to be intensely interested.
- QM as an uninterpreted recipe contains enough puzzles and surprises
- to keep the vast majority of them working hard-- and one can obtain
- a remarkably usable working understanding of how to use QM without
- ever worrying about what the foundations are.
-
- >That is one thing I find incoherent in quantum mechanics; it
- >simultaneously requires that observers be given special status in the
- >theory and denies that they have such a special status. Another source
- >of incoherence is the nature of the wave function. Physicists often
- >deny that the wave function is an objective physical quantity, and
- >also will deny that anything *other* than the wave function is an
- >objective physical quantity. They will say that nothing is real except
- >observation, and then say that observation is simply a special case of
- >a quantum mechanical interaction.
-
- I suspect that you (or perhaps they) are treating a number of
- different interpretations as the same thing. Personally, I am all for
- using more precise language when talking about these things, and
- I've always found the smugness that exists in some textbook descriptions
- of the subject a bit unnerving, as if the author were trying to paper
- over basic ignorance in order to get on with the math. But I doubt
- we can really expect the matter to be settled definitively one way
- or another. There will mostly likely always be a few consistent
- interpretations simultaneously compatible with the data, and different
- ones may even be more useful for thinking about different problems.
-
- It's, IMHO, likely that when more people try harder to state their
- ideas precisely and the dust settles, we may end up with a situation
- like the difference between the Heisenberg and the Schrodinger pictures.
- The operators seem to have something to do with reality, but is it the
- operators that are *really* evolving with time, or is it the state
- vector? Nobody cares, because the formulations are logically equivalent,
- nothing you do is going to tell you which one is *really* moving,
- and both (as well as hybrids) are useful in various situations. So
- are the probabilities real and the state vector just a calculational
- device, or is the universe nothing but an evolving state vector? Should
- a measuring device be given special status, and if so, what's a
- measuring device? It may well turn out that the precisely stated
- approaches will turn out to be logically equivalent, and the answer
- will depend on what problem you're tackling.
-
- >The bottom line for physicists is of course prediction, and in spite
- >of the incoherent mess that quantum theory is, one can identify a
- >solid enough core to make uncannily accurate predictions. That's
- >enough for some people, but not for everyone.
-
- The "incoherent mess" may lie more in the minds of the physicists
- you're talking to than in the theory as a whole. I agree that people
- who deny the legitimacy of the study of interpretations, or who regard
- it as a solved problem, are deluding themselves.
- --
- Matt McIrvin
-