>> Just exchange the 2 slits in the experiments that I described with a polarizer and then the world would split because of polarization differences not because of which slip the photon went through, or if you prefer exchange the photons with electrons and the 2 slits with a Stern-Gerlach magnet, and then the world will split because of differences in spin of the electron; after that everything I said was still hold true, and nowhere would there be a need to invoke non-local influences. And you can build any Bell-type experiment you like with polarization or with spin,> Yes. But you have to show how non-separable states can exhibit locality. Or, at least, you are required to show in detail how the correlation arise locally, in many worlds, or in any other theory.
>> for these purposes the words "world" and "universe" are interchangeable and have exactly the same meaning they have when used in any other context. I meant nothing new or exotic in the words.> Worlds are disjoint and do not interact.
On Thu, Mar 3, 2022 at 7:03 PM Bruce Kellett <bhkel...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Just exchange the 2 slits in the experiments that I described with a polarizer and then the world would split because of polarization differences not because of which slip the photon went through, or if you prefer exchange the photons with electrons and the 2 slits with a Stern-Gerlach magnet, and then the world will split because of differences in spin of the electron; after that everything I said was still hold true, and nowhere would there be a need to invoke non-local influences. And you can build any Bell-type experiment you like with polarization or with spin,> Yes. But you have to show how non-separable states can exhibit locality. Or, at least, you are required to show in detail how the correlation arise locally, in many worlds, or in any other theory.Well OK but.... if you want all the details this is going to be a long post, you asked for it.
> What is required is a local account, invoking many worlds as necessary, that can explain how the correlations are built up. In the usual Alice/Bob setup, when Alice measures her particle, she splits into two branches: in one of which she sees spin_up and in the other, spin_down. Similarly, Bob splits on his measurement into Bob_up and Bob_down branches. When Alice and Bob come together, each splits again according to which branch of the other they meet. So there are then four branches, up-up, up-down, down-up, and down-down for the results of Alice and Bob respectively.
> the current post comes no nearer to giving a local explanation than any of your previous posts.
On Fri, Mar 4, 2022 at 5:34 PM Bruce Kellett <bhkel...@gmail.com> wrote:> What is required is a local account, invoking many worlds as necessary, that can explain how the correlations are built up. In the usual Alice/Bob setup, when Alice measures her particle, she splits into two branches: in one of which she sees spin_up and in the other, spin_down. Similarly, Bob splits on his measurement into Bob_up and Bob_down branches. When Alice and Bob come together, each splits again according to which branch of the other they meet. So there are then four branches, up-up, up-down, down-up, and down-down for the results of Alice and Bob respectively.No! There are only two branches, if 2 electrons are entangled and Alice measures spin up then Bob will measure spin down with certainty. The outcome of the experiment can only be up-down or down-up, up-up and down-down NEVER happens
Many Worlds doesn't say everything can happen, it says everything that is consistent with Schrödinger's Equation will happen, but up-up and down-down are NOT consistent with Schrodinger.
In the language of Many Worlds, the world splits into the up-down and down-up universes, there are no up-up or down-down universes.> the current post comes no nearer to giving a local explanation than any of your previous posts.I clearly showed that a violation of Bell's Inequality is not just physically impossible but is logically impossible IF things are both local and realistic, and I also clearly showed that Many Worlds can still work because although it is local it is not realistic, and because Many Worlds is non-realistic, and thus doesn't have a static lookup table, it has no need to resort to any of these non-local influences to explain experimental results.
>>> What is required is a local account, invoking many worlds as necessary, that can explain how the correlations are built up. In the usual Alice/Bob setup, when Alice measures her particle, she splits into two branches: in one of which she sees spin_up and in the other, spin_down. Similarly, Bob splits on his measurement into Bob_up and Bob_down branches. When Alice and Bob come together, each splits again according to which branch of the other they meet. So there are then four branches, up-up, up-down, down-up, and down-down for the results of Alice and Bob respectively.>>No! There are only two branches, if 2 electrons are entangled and Alice measures spin up then Bob will measure spin down with certainty. The outcome of the experiment can only be up-down or down-up, up-up and down-down NEVER happens>That is what you are required to explain. The Schrodinger equation certainly allows, in fact, requires, all four branches to be present
On Sat, Mar 5, 2022 at 11:17 AM John Clark <johnk...@gmail.com> wrote:>>> What is required is a local account, invoking many worlds as necessary, that can explain how the correlations are built up. In the usual Alice/Bob setup, when Alice measures her particle, she splits into two branches: in one of which she sees spin_up and in the other, spin_down. Similarly, Bob splits on his measurement into Bob_up and Bob_down branches. When Alice and Bob come together, each splits again according to which branch of the other they meet. So there are then four branches, up-up, up-down, down-up, and down-down for the results of Alice and Bob respectively.>>No! There are only two branches, if 2 electrons are entangled and Alice measures spin up then Bob will measure spin down with certainty. The outcome of the experiment can only be up-down or down-up, up-up and down-down NEVER happens>That is what you are required to explain. The Schrodinger equation certainly allows, in fact, requires, all four branches to be presentBULLSHIT!> That is a most eloquent refutation of everything you have ever said.Just answer me 2 questions.1) If Schrodinger's equation not only allows but insists that conservation of spin be violated as you claim
then why the hell did they give Schrödinger the Nobel prize for finding an equation that grossly violates experimental results.2) Why the hell are physics students still required to study such a ridiculous useless equation that has no relation to physical reality?
Many Worlds doesn't say everything can happen, it says everything that is consistent with Schrödinger's Equation will happen, but up-up and down-down are NOT consistent with Schrodinger.
>> Just answer me 2 questions.1) If Schrodinger's equation not only allows but insists that conservation of spin be violated as you claim> That is not the claim I made.
> I said "The Schrodinger equation certainly allows, in fact, requires, all four branches to be present
> If the measurements Alice and Bob make are independent." You dishonestly deleted the last part of this statement. If the measurements are independent,
> When the measurements are not independent, as when Alice and Bob measure a pair of entangled spin zero particles, then only two branches are present if the polarizers are parallel (but all four branches are present if the polarizers are not parallel).
> The question is, "Why is that? What makes the difference?
> The Shrodinger equation is studied because it is useful.
On Fri, Mar 4, 2022 at 8:11 PM Bruce Kellett <bhkel...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Just answer me 2 questions.1) If Schrodinger's equation not only allows but insists that conservation of spin be violated as you claim> That is not the claim I made.Like hell it wasn't! What I said was "The outcome of the experiment can only be up-down or down-up, up-up and down-down NEVER happens" you responded with "That is what you are required to explain. The Schrodinger equation certainly allows, in fact, requires, all four branches to be present". Now I know that anybody can have a brain fart, and if that's what it was I won't speak about it again, but don't tell me that wasn't the claim you made because that is bullshit.> I said "The Schrodinger equation certainly allows, in fact, requires, all four branches to be presentYes, that's what you said. And if Schrodinger equation allowed ( or even demand according to you) that the conservation of spin be violated then no respectable physicist would touch Schrodinger's equation with a 10 foot pole. But of course it isn't true.> If the measurements Alice and Bob make are independent." You dishonestly deleted the last part of this statement. If the measurements are independent,And that is more nonsense, if the particles are in entangled, as they must be if you wish to perform any Bell type experiment , then the particles can't be independent, because that's what entangled means> When the measurements are not independent, as when Alice and Bob measure a pair of entangled spin zero particles, then only two branches are present if the polarizers are parallel (but all four branches are present if the polarizers are not parallel).So now you're claiming if the polarizers are not parallel then the law of conservation of spin is violated, you're claiming that a zero spin particle could decay into 2 spin up particles, and that is pure unadulterated extra-virgin bullshit.
>> So now you're claiming if the polarizers are not parallel then the law of conservation of spin is violated, you're claiming that a zero spin particle could decay into 2 spin up particles, and that is pure unadulterated extra-virgin bullshit.> I think you need to brush up on some elementary quantum mechanics. If the polarizers are not parallel (at a relative angle theta) then the probability of an up-up result for Alice and Bob's measurements is given by sin^2(theta/2).
> Since up-up and down-down results are possible for non-aligned polarizers,
> all four branches are present in this general case.
On Sat, Mar 5, 2022 at 2:50 AM John Clark <johnk...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thu, Mar 3, 2022 at 7:03 PM Bruce Kellett <bhkel...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Just exchange the 2 slits in the experiments that I described with a polarizer and then the world would split because of polarization differences not because of which slip the photon went through, or if you prefer exchange the photons with electrons and the 2 slits with a Stern-Gerlach magnet, and then the world will split because of differences in spin of the electron; after that everything I said was still hold true, and nowhere would there be a need to invoke non-local influences. And you can build any Bell-type experiment you like with polarization or with spin,> Yes. But you have to show how non-separable states can exhibit locality. Or, at least, you are required to show in detail how the correlation arise locally, in many worlds, or in any other theory.Well OK but.... if you want all the details this is going to be a long post, you asked for it.Yes, I asked for a detailed account of how MWI produces the correlations for the entangled singlet state. The trouble is that you have not provided this. Your post is long and rambling, full of a lot of unnecessary detail, but the bottom line is the claim that since MWI is not realistic, it can be local. You have made that claim many times before, but the current post comes no nearer to giving a local explanation than any of your previous posts.What is required is a local account, invoking many worlds as necessary, that can explain how the correlations are built up. In the usual Alice/Bob setup, when Alice measures her particle, she splits into two branches: in one of which she sees spin_up and in the other, spin_down. Similarly, Bob splits on his measurement into Bob_up and Bob_down branches. When Alice and Bob come together, each splits again according to which branch of the other they meet. So there are then four branches, up-up, up-down, down-up, and down-down for the results of Alice and Bob respectively. For all polarizer orientations apart from parallel or orthogonal, these four branches must exist. But for parallel or orthogonal polarizers only two branches are possible for an initial singlet state -- Alice and Bob must get opposite results, for parallel polarizers, and the same result for orthogonal polarizers. In other words the up-up and down-down branches do not exist for parallel polarizers. How is this magic achieved in many worlds?Things are more complicated in the general case of polarizers at an arbitrary relative angle, theta. The question then is how do we manage the correlations between consecutive trials in order to preserve the cos^2(theta/2) probability. (Over a sequence of N trials, the proportion of up-down branches for polarizers at the relative angle theta must be approximately cos^2(theta/2)).In a sequence of N trials, both Alice and Bob split into 2^N copies, each copy has a unique sequence of up and down results. When Alice and Bob meet, the usual MWI procedure means that there are (2^N)^(2^N) branches, as each of the 2^N branches for Alice meets the 2^N branches for Bob. Out of all these branches, only one has the matching sequence of up and down from each end required to get the correlations correct, How does MWI get rid of all the (2^N)^(2^N)-1 incorrect branches?This is the question you are required to answer in detail, without generalized fudging or appeals to magic.Bruce
On Friday, March 4, 2022 at 4:34:12 PM UTC-6 Bruce wrote:On Sat, Mar 5, 2022 at 2:50 AM John Clark <johnk...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thu, Mar 3, 2022 at 7:03 PM Bruce Kellett <bhkel...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Just exchange the 2 slits in the experiments that I described with a polarizer and then the world would split because of polarization differences not because of which slip the photon went through, or if you prefer exchange the photons with electrons and the 2 slits with a Stern-Gerlach magnet, and then the world will split because of differences in spin of the electron; after that everything I said was still hold true, and nowhere would there be a need to invoke non-local influences. And you can build any Bell-type experiment you like with polarization or with spin,> Yes. But you have to show how non-separable states can exhibit locality. Or, at least, you are required to show in detail how the correlation arise locally, in many worlds, or in any other theory.Well OK but.... if you want all the details this is going to be a long post, you asked for it.Yes, I asked for a detailed account of how MWI produces the correlations for the entangled singlet state. The trouble is that you have not provided this. Your post is long and rambling, full of a lot of unnecessary detail, but the bottom line is the claim that since MWI is not realistic, it can be local. You have made that claim many times before, but the current post comes no nearer to giving a local explanation than any of your previous posts.What is required is a local account, invoking many worlds as necessary, that can explain how the correlations are built up. In the usual Alice/Bob setup, when Alice measures her particle, she splits into two branches: in one of which she sees spin_up and in the other, spin_down. Similarly, Bob splits on his measurement into Bob_up and Bob_down branches. When Alice and Bob come together, each splits again according to which branch of the other they meet. So there are then four branches, up-up, up-down, down-up, and down-down for the results of Alice and Bob respectively. For all polarizer orientations apart from parallel or orthogonal, these four branches must exist. But for parallel or orthogonal polarizers only two branches are possible for an initial singlet state -- Alice and Bob must get opposite results, for parallel polarizers, and the same result for orthogonal polarizers. In other words the up-up and down-down branches do not exist for parallel polarizers. How is this magic achieved in many worlds?Things are more complicated in the general case of polarizers at an arbitrary relative angle, theta. The question then is how do we manage the correlations between consecutive trials in order to preserve the cos^2(theta/2) probability. (Over a sequence of N trials, the proportion of up-down branches for polarizers at the relative angle theta must be approximately cos^2(theta/2)).In a sequence of N trials, both Alice and Bob split into 2^N copies, each copy has a unique sequence of up and down results. When Alice and Bob meet, the usual MWI procedure means that there are (2^N)^(2^N) branches, as each of the 2^N branches for Alice meets the 2^N branches for Bob. Out of all these branches, only one has the matching sequence of up and down from each end required to get the correlations correct, How does MWI get rid of all the (2^N)^(2^N)-1 incorrect branches?This is the question you are required to answer in detail, without generalized fudging or appeals to magic.BruceThe issue is the extent to which there is subjectivity. With MWI we have this idea an observer is in a sense "quantum frame dragged" along eigenstates corresponding to all possible measurements, but is able to make a conscious account of only one. This observer witnesses this post-measurement state as a separable state that is local. However, if the observer is frame dragged along all possible paths there is a statistical ensemble of separable states, but we know this is not a separable state in total. What is an account of a separable state is then subjective to the observer.This is to be compared to qubism, where the probability outcome is a subjective Bayesian update. There are some things to be said for Qubism IMO, though it has some almost solipsistic implications. Qubism is a ψ-epistemic interpretation while MWI is ψ-ontological, in that with qubism assigns no particular existence to the wave function. The quantum wave of course has no operator assigned to it that gives an eigenvalue, but there is the density operator ρ = |ψ〉〈ψ| that defines probabilities. Probability is in qubism based again on Bayesian statistics considers these subjective. With MWI the wave function is treated more as a real, real in the existential sense than mathematical, object, but it is highly nonlocal. This splitting off of worlds is not tied to any point in space or spacetime, and if the wave is determined by field operators acting on a Fock basis, then field locality is not global. The subjectivity of the wave as separable means we have a conflict with the QFT axioms. This subjectivity is not with the probabilities, so much as it is with the interpretation of post-measurement states relative to re-measurement states.
> The issue is the extent to which there is subjectivity.
> With MWI we have this idea an observer is in a sense "quantum frame dragged" along eigenstates corresponding to all possible measurements, but is able to make a conscious account of only one.
> This observer witnesses this [pre]-measurement state as a separable state that is local.
> However, if the observer is frame dragged along all possible paths
> there is a statistical ensemble of separable states, but we know this is not a separable state in total. What is an account of a separable state is then subjective to the observer.
> This is to be compared to qubism, where the probability outcome is a subjective Bayesian update.
> There are some things to be said for Qubism IMO, though it has some almost solipsistic implications.
> Qubism is a ψ-epistemic interpretation while MWI is ψ-ontological,
> in that with qubism assigns no particular existence to the wave function.
> The quantum wave of course has no operator assigned to it that gives an eigenvalue, but there is the density operator ρ = |ψ〉〈ψ| that defines probabilities. Probability is in qubism based again on Bayesian statistics considers these subjective. With MWI the wave function is treated more as a real, real in the existential sense than mathematical, object, but it is highly nonlocal. This splitting off of worlds is not tied to any point in space or spacetime
> At best either one uses the one which makes the best sense of some problem, or you just "shut up and calculate."
> it all involves the issue to what extent the decoherence of quantum states by coupling a larger quantum system (measurement apparatus or observer) is at all computable.
The situation is similar for protein folding. Again, people have said that Nature seems to be solving an NP-hard optimization problem in every cell of your body, by letting the proteins fold into their minimum-energy configurations. But there are two problems with this claim. The first problem is that proteins, just like soap bubbles, sometimes get stuck in suboptimal configurations — indeed, it’s believed that’s exactly what happens with Mad Cow Disease. The second problem is that, to the extent that proteins do usually fold into their optimal configurations, there’s an obvious reason why they would: natural selection! If there were a protein that could only be folded by proving the Riemann Hypothesis, the gene that coded for it would quickly get weeded out of the gene pool."
> The shut-up-and-calculate approach might be compared to the Euclid 5th axiom that is not decidable,
> I am not particularly an upholder of any interpretation of quantum mechanics.
> There is a lot here that you wrote. Some does not seem to fit that consistently, if you ask me. Einstein had none of these issues with the development of GR,
> for at that time the conflict between our classical understanding and quantum mechanics was not known.
> GR is also a classical theory.