> There is no requirement for an infinite number of degrees of freedom.
> Escape of just one IR photon to outer space is sufficient to destroy reversibility.
> The definition of 'world' in the context of QM is made exact precisely because of this irreversibility.
> Worlds are well-defined
> More Trump physics?
> What's a measurement?
> I have no clue.
On Sun, Jan 31, 2021 at 12:48 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> More Trump physics?More profound revelations from self proclaimed Carl Sagan co-author Alan Grayson?> What's a measurement?Why on earth are you asking me of all people that question?!! In many worlds it doesn't matter one iota what the hell a measurement is! That's only important in Copenhagen and in most other quantum interpretations, in many worlds it's completely irrelevant. So you tell me, what is a measurement?
> So you tell me, what is a measurement?
> I did, several times. [,,,] Same with "observer"
> For the double slit, say, a measurement occurs when a particle hits the screen (time and location).
> One of the features of Trumpism and Trump physics is Alzheimer's onset.
On Sun, Jan 31, 2021 at 8:28 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> One of the features of Trumpism and Trump physics is Alzheimer's onset.So says 90+ year old Alan Grayson, if one believes his claim to have co-authored a scientific paper with Carl Sagan.
>>> One of the features of Trumpism and Trump physics is Alzheimer's onset.>>So says 90+ year old Alan Grayson, if one believes his claim to have co-authored a scientific paper with Carl Sagan.> More evidence of Alzheimer's? I told you I use a pseudonym here, but you forgot.
On 30 Jan 2021, at 12:26, John Clark <johnk...@gmail.com> wrote:> There is no requirement for an infinite number of degrees of freedom.In physics there will never be a theory that requires infinite degrees of freedom, at least not until somebody performs an experiment with infinite accuracy, and I'm not holding my breath for that.> Escape of just one IR photon to outer space is sufficient to destroy reversibility.Sometimes, usually in fact, but not always. Not if 2 quite different events can produce the same identical photon that escapes into infinite space, and not if the photon is not even allowed to escape but Is absorbed by a photographic plate or a brick wall. A good example of this sort of thing would be the quantum eraser experiment, or the delayed choice experiment. Or just study how a Mach–Zehnder interferometer works. These experiments are possible but they're not easy because the experimenter must make sure that there's a difference between the two worlds but the difference must be very small so a practical way can be found to make the two worlds identical again so they can be nudged back together again into one world.> The definition of 'world' in the context of QM is made exact precisely because of this irreversibility.Only in pure mathematics are definitions precise,
in science and and everything else they're just an approximation, a label for an idea learned through examples, a collection of words that are defined by other words. And Hugh Everett invented the theory but he didn't invent the phrase "Many Worlds”,
that was done by others and only gives a very approximate idea of what the theory is about. According to Everett the debate on if matter is made of particles or waves is over, it's made of waves. And in that theory the approximate definition of the world "world" is a collection of different waves that include at least one conscious being that is approximately the same in all of them.> Worlds are well-definedWords are defined by other words and those words are in turn defined by yet more words. Even the word "defined" is defined by words. But whatever physical reality turns out to be at its most fundamental level I think we can be pretty sure it's not made of words.
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On 31 Jan 2021, at 06:48, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:When a particle hits the screen in a double slit experiment, is that a measurement? AG
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On 31 Jan 2021, at 06:48, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:When a particle hits the screen in a double slit experiment, is that a measurement? AGYou can say that it is a measurement from the screen point of view. But as screen have no re-accessible memory, it is better to define the measurement relatively to some machine with Memory, like Everett.
Bruce
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