Dear Richard,
I am also sure that no-one in this group can really doubt that “things
really exist”. Most scientists follow metaphysical realism rather than
dogmatic realism, unlike Einstein. I write in my unpublished article
“Physical thinking and the GHZ theorem” that Einstein followed
dogmatic rather than metaphysical realism since he was understanding
the validity of Kant’s avowal that ”it always remains a scandal of
philosophy and universal human reason that the existence of things
outside us (from which we after all get the whole matter for our
cognitions, even for our inner sense) should have to be assumed merely
on faith, and that if it occurs to anyone to doubt it, we should be
unable to answer him with a satisfactory proof”.
According to Kant’s philosophy realism is the regulative principle of
our reason, which determines the very possibility of empirical
cognition of Nature. It is easy to understand without philosophy why
realism determines the very possibility of empirical cognition.
Realism (dogmatic according to Heisenberg) states that the moon exists
even if no one looks at it. Therefore, we must explain how our mind
creates the moon when observing if we reject realism. Einstein, like
Kant, understood that realism is ”the presupposition of every kind of
physical thinking” rather than a claim which can be disproved with any
experimental results. The creators of quantum mechanics abandoned
realism because of the impossibility of a realistic description of
some quantum phenomena. This rejection was a fundamental mistake since
the rejection of realism results in the degradation of physical
thinking.
The degradation of physical thinking is manifested in the uncertainty
and inconsistency of statements not only by modern authors, but even
by the creators of quantum mechanics. A certain group of physicists
misunderstand the jargon which they use. In particular they do not
understand why variables can be hidden. You have expressed doubt that
the theory of hidden variables can be distinguished from quantum
mechanics. But we are talking about theories created by our (human)
reason, and not about reality or phenomena that we did not create.
Therefore, we must clearly understand the essence of the difference
between the theory of hidden variables and quantum mechanics and the
logical consequences of this difference.
Hidden variables play the same role as the thing-in-itself in Kant's
philosophy: they are the cause of the phenomena which we observe. Kant
understood that without the thing-in-itself the mind of the observer
should logically become the cause of the phenomena. Einstein also
understood that the denial by the creators of quantum mechanics of the
cause of some quantum phenomena in Nature, makes the mind of the
observer the cause of these phenomena. Quantum mechanics indeed
postulates that the mind of the observer can create quantum states at
observation.
A certain group of physicists and not only physicists do not quite
clearly understand that there is a method of description and the
subject of description. You did not recommend me to use ket’s to
denote observational facts, when everyone else is used to using them
to denote vectors in Hilbert space. But vectors in Hilbert space refer
to the description method used in quantum mechanics to describe the
observer's knowledge of the results of an upcoming observation, which
are the object of description in this case.
I draw your attention that quantum mechanics uses not only Hilbert
space, but also real three-dimensional space to describe quantum
states. It is this subjective and objective consideration of quantum
states that is one of the reasons for the mass illusion about the
reality of a quantum computer in real three-dimensional space.
According to almost universal opinion, the advantage of a quantum
computer is based on the fact that “Hilbert space is indeed a big
place” [1]. But a quantum computer must exist in the real
three-dimensional space rather than multidimensional Hilbert space.
You think David Deutsch and other proponents of Many Worlds are idiots
because you don't understand that orthodox quantum mechanics is more
contradictory, more absurd and more misleading than the theory of Many
Worlds. I think one can say the same thing about David Deutsch that
Einstein said about Louis de Broglie: he seems crazy, but he thinks
very logically.
[1] M. A. Nielsen and I, L Chuang, Quantum Computation and Quantum
Information. Cambridge University Press, 2000.
With best wishes,
Alexey
пн, 27 июн. 2022 г. в 17:42, Алексей Никулов <
nikulo...@gmail.com>: