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#1 | |||||||||
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Core Member [162%]
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This post title comes from the complete Seed Magazine title
To view links or images in this forum your post count must be 2 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. The author, hedging his bets, has a qualifying 'may' in the title. This is to note that there may be loopholes indicating quantum physics is wrong. This post is to highlight one more experiment, with increased rigorousness, which has closed one more loophole. This thread picks up from a thread titled To view links or images in this forum your post count must be 2 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. In that thread I To view links or images in this forum your post count must be 2 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. a link to a recent BBC video To view links or images in this forum your post count must be 2 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. That video includes the man, and the experiment of which the Seed Magazine article is about. The Seed Magazine adds information the video didn't have. The first page is a history lesson. All the players and their roles are covered - Heisenberg, Planck, Bohr, Einstein, Schrödinger, Born, Podolsky, Rosen, Bohm. Bell, Leggett and Zeilinger. For those grasping at loopholes:
The stakes are high:
The result:
The last apparent loophole to be closed will be accomplished by an experiment in space, according to Leggett's view. |
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#2 |
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Member [02%]
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I think discussion is likely to go off on a variety of tangents unless you specify what you mean by "create". To my ongoing annoyance, attempting to define that word usually plunges me into circularity. For instance (and I'm trusting you not to mock me too hard for this):
"To create a thing is to change at least one measured quality of the world. What was formerly not measured has now been measured. An empty lot has become a house. A proton and antiproton have become a soup of particles." But then creation is dependent upon two measurements, before and after the act. Plus a third that verifies an act took place between the other two. Yet there is always time between the first measurement and the act-measurement, time during which the measured quality might have altered for other reasons. Which means that claiming to have created a thing is always at best a plausible boast. That definition won't work at all for your question since it renders creation a matter of opinion, where you're looking for something more tangible. |
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#3 |
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Core Member [162%]
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@Asat
Does your fear of being mocked have something to do with non-scientific background ? It has been said the P&E forum (Prove you exist thread, for example) is a forum of 'opinions'. This is in the S&H forum because it is an experimental 'data point'. It is a controversial one, here on iNTJf as it is in the wider real-life world. This is much mocking over the OP assertion, everywhere. It may well show up in this thread by others, but not me. Creation in this case means to 'make manifest in the physical world from the non-physical state'. In conventional physics jargon it is stated as 'collapsing the wave' referring to quantum physics and it's characteristic of discovering what reality 'really is'. Measurement can only occur in the physical reality, so yes, one needs a before/after set of measurements to make empirical observations. The time-past between measurements is what experimental design criteria is about, in part. Good design considers it and designs accordingly. If you read the Seed article, you will have jumped into the middle of 'the story' excepting what history is included in the article. If that is your sole 'data base' of direct knowledge it may be difficult to grasp the gravity of this experiment. It would also be easy to underestimate the significance of why space is most likely the last stage for this type of experiment. Enjoy ! |
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#4 | |||
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Core Member [220%]
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Very interesting. With my limited understanding of quantum mechanics, I had very similar and almost as crystallized ideas regarding decoherence, á la |
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#5 | |||
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Member [02%]
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If my understanding of QM is close to the mark then we need not look at the universe to create it, using the definition you propose. Previously manifested objects will do that for us. |
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#6 |
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Core Member [162%]
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My effort in relation to this post can best be described as one to define the boundaries and it's internal mechanisms of the whole system.
It seems you are thinking, exclusively, in reductionist terms. I am not. |
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#7 |
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Veteran Member [59%]
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There are some pretty good theories that allow for mind creates matter, the only problem is is there would have to be a collective or primary to keep it all on the same page, and to account for the existence of the universe before say... 2 billion years ago. I read a book called "the quantum self" a while back that seemed to infer there was some sort of a basic "awareness" even to sub-atomic particles in how the reacted to others in their vicinity. That book was written in the 90s so it is a bit outdated by quantum physics standards.
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#8 | |||
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Core Member [162%]
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There is actually at least one falsifiable theory that goes to higher level of abstraction to explain mind/matter relationships, since 'the beginning'. Some can't/won't get there because they have 'belief systems' that are more important to them than the truth. |
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