godless dave
Great Dalmuti
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2007
- Messages
- 8,266
The reason physicists don't try to explain consciousness is because it's a biological phenomenon.
(my emphasis)
The statement in bold is incorrect. The whole point of MWI is that probabilities are the fraction of "worlds" in which an event occurs or does not occur. If you set up and participated in N quantum suicides each with 50/50 odds, your chances of survival would be 1/2^N both in MWI and in the more standard QM interpretation.
One of the things I've never really understood about MW is the interpretation of measurements when there is two possible outcomes but they are not 50/50. I'm not sure how to phrase my confusion in to a meaningful question though.
It is really just a simple matter of statistics, the more ways there are for one particular outcome to happen the greater its probability and although you may only have two particular outcomes to choose from they are not always equally probable.
In a deck of cards 12 of the 52 cards are face card (Jack, Queen or King). So if we consider the two possible outcomes as drawing a face card and drawing some other card the probability is 3/10 (12 face cards / 40 other cards).
ETA: In a MWI of a “quantum” deck of cards each of the 52 possible outcomes will happen, 12 where a face card is drawn and 40 where another card is drawn. Which one of these 52 worlds I might find myself, depends on the specific card I observe that has been drawn.
But in the MWI the 12 face cards are indistinguishable. And the 40 numbered cards are also indistinguishable.
If the two probabilities were, say, 0.49 and 0.51 we'd have 98 more worlds than if the probabilities were 0.5 each?
The whole point of MWI is that probabilities are the fraction of "worlds" in which an event occurs or does not occur.
For a single measurement with two possible outcomes (event and non-event if you like) there are two possible "worlds". One for event and one for non-event. To me, with the above statement, this suggests that with many worlds the probabilities should always be 50/50 for a single measurement with two possible outcomes.
So where is my understanding fundamentally wrong?
Hi Blutoski
I was quoting from wiki
"Gardner has said that he suspects that the fundamental nature of human consciousness may not be knowable or discoverable, unless perhaps a physics more profound than ("underlying") quantum mechanics is some day developed." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Gardner.
The only interpretation I made from this is
"1. The fundamentals of human conciousness is undiscoverable
2. It is discoverable only if a new physics mechanism is made available.
I suspect he refers to quantum mechanics as this is the best we have to offer at the moment.
"
MAybe it would help to think of each instance of the experiment above producing 5 worlds instead of 2, 4 of which are identical and correspond to outcome A and one to outcome B.
Yes, and I was wondering why you brought it up. I thought it was an attempt to critique my statement that Gardner believes philosophers' interference in scientific operations to be detrimental. The passage doesn't really speak to this claim, so I have no idea why you submitted it to the discussion.
Forget about QM for a moment, and think about what probabilities mean. They mean that if you repeated an experiment a bizzillion times, the results would converge to the probability distribution.
agreed. and neither does understanding its history, or the details of its mathemaical formulation.being morally or philosophically problematic has no bearing on whether a scientific theory is an accurate description of reality.
Russell's maths was groundbreaking, his destruction of Hilbert's dream may have been disappointing but was certainly important. Was any of his philosophical musings of similar importance to anyone other than a philosopher.
The 'Should we do it?' question is indeed in the domain of philosophy but in moral philosophy not the philosophy of science. ... Unless they show some utility, what are they worth, certainly nothing to a scientist.
(my emphasis)
The statement in bold is incorrect. The whole point of MWI is that probabilities are the fraction of "worlds" in which an event occurs or does not occur. If you set up and participated in N quantum suicides each with 50/50 odds, your chances of survival would be 1/2^N both in MWI and in the more standard QM interpretation.
so what about a "how should we do it" question, say, in the statistical design of experiments.
i generally hate biological examples in physics arguments, but i fear this one fits best:
you are testing for the effectiveness of a new drug.
you design a clinical trial, but wish to stop the trial early if the drug is shown to be either useless or harmful. doing the statistics is straight-forward once you know the number of patients the trial impacts, and there is the rub: is the "number of patients" the number of people in the trial -or- the number of people who will have this disease in the next 50 years -or- other.
answering this question is critical to the design of the scientific experiment, yet it is arguably not a scientific question.
philosophers demonstrate utility here, for example.
and when you cannot repeat the experiment a "bizzillion times"?
what do they mean then?
for instance, in a forecast that there is an 80% probability of rain a london heathrow airport tomorrow?
should a physicist worry about this question?
and if not, returning to the thread, might a philosopher who does worry about it potentially say something interesting/useful for the physicist?
so what about a "how should we do it" question, say, in the statistical design of experiments.
i generally hate biological examples in physics arguments, but i fear this one fits best:
you are testing for the effectiveness of a new drug.
you design a clinical trial, but wish to stop the trial early if the drug is shown to be either useless or harmful. doing the statistics is straight-forward once you know the number of patients the trial impacts, and there is the rub: is the "number of patients" the number of people in the trial -or- the number of people who will have this disease in the next 50 years -or- other.
answering this question is critical to the design of the scientific experiment, yet it is arguably not a scientific question.
philosophers demonstrate utility here, for example.