randman has not provided any scientific evidence for Intelligent Design or Creationism.
Because
randman has transcended the boundaries of rational discourse, I'll limit myself to documenting some of his recent falsehoods. That's why this post is so long.
Either quote where WD claims this, or prove to us that you don't eat babies.
(Hey, if you can insist WD defend something he didn't assert, then I can insist the same of you.)
Also: You are STILL missing the point. No one is claiming MWI is better than anything else. Everyone is trying to drive point the (apparently massively complicated) point that each interpretation is valid. But, because you put CI on a pedestal, when we try to level the field, as it were, you see it as an attack on CI--and by extension--your whole "theory".
Wrong. I flat out said you could use MWI as an alternative, but WD derided Copenhagen as metaphysics and said a bunch of other bs.
The Wikipedia link for
quantum metaphysics is
That link redirects to the Wikipedia article on interpretations of quantum mechanics, which lists the Copenhagen interpretation as the first of these fourteen named examples:
- Copenhagen interpretation
- many worlds
- consistent histories
- ensemble interpretation
- de Broglie-Bohm theory
- relational quantum mechanics
- transactional interpretation
- stochastic mechanics
- objective collapse theories
- von Neumann/Wigner interpretation: consciousness causes collapse
- many minds
- quantum logic
- modal interpretations of quantum mechanics
- time-symmetric theories
To state that these interpretations (and others) are metaphysical alternatives is accurate. By regarding that accurate statement as derision,
randman appears to assert that the philosophical issues addressed by these interpretations are unworthy of serious consideration. If so, then
randman's contempt for philosophical interpretations should include the Copenhagen interpretation, because it comes first on the list.
I do not share
randman's apparent contempt for metaphysical intepretations of quantum mechanics. When I say that modal or many-worlds or Copenhagen interpretations are metaphysical, I am not deriding them. I am identifying their intellectual character and explaining their relationship to the "shut up and calculate" science of quantum mechanics.
For example, I stated:
When 2 particles are entangled and you can see this principle elsewhere but entanglement is perhaps most clear, they will act as one system regardless of distance (space) and so that also means regardless of time as well. Locality is thus violated.
That is standard quantum mechanics. I admit you can try to get around it via MWI.
WD responds with total bs.
I stated, correctly, that the violation of locality perceived by
randman is not implied by the hard science of quantum mechanics, but by the Copenhagen interpretation in which
randman so fervently believes. With several of the other metaphysical interpretations that are listed above, including but not limited to the many-worlds interpretations, locality is not violated. Hence the violation of locality is subjective and metaphysical, not a matter of hard science.
That's your personal interpretation, your personal metaphysics. You are asserting your personal metaphysics as objective fact, but it isn't.
He obviously has no idea whatsoever if he is going to say this my "personal metaphysics." That's why I quoted scientists like Zeilinger who shows repeatedly a violation of locality, local realism, etc,...... That's why the term "non-local" is used. His suggestion I made this up is asinine and wrong.
The Copenhagen interpretation dates back to 1927 or so. If
randman thinks I was accusing him of having invented that interpretation, he is mistaken. I was stating the rather obvious fact that
randman has accepted some variation of the Copenhagen interpretation as one of the things he personally believes.
He then says this:
Virtually all physicists accept the reality of objective reality
That's completely wrong again. Quantum physicists like Zeilinger of the dominant Copenhagen school of thought and maybe many in MWI do not accept the concept of objective reality.
He then blathers on and on about a "general sense of objective reality" which shows he never understood the term in context in the first place. No one is saying the universe does not exist when they say objective reality is incorrect.
By saying that virtually all physicists accept the reality of objective reality, I was answering Einstein's highly relevant question to Abraham Pais by saying that virtually all physicists believe the moon exists even when they are not looking at it.
I might be wrong about that, but
randman's last sentence above suggests he concedes that point. If so, then I happily admit to having no clue as to what
randman means by objective reality, in or out of context.
WD, you said this:
Although this is at least the second time you've accused me of claiming that Copenhagen interpretations preserve locality and realism, I very much doubt whether I have ever made such a claim.
You clearly did in this exchange.
W.D.Clinger said:
When 2 particles are entangled and you can see this principle elsewhere but entanglement is perhaps most clear, they will act as one system regardless of distance (space) and so that also means regardless of time as well. Locality is thus violated.
That's your personal interpretation, your personal metaphysics. You are asserting your personal metaphysics as objective fact, but it isn't.
I said QM (and though you did not quote me on it, I also made clear you could argue MWI as an alternative) shows a violation of locality.
You responded I was asserting my "personal metaphysics." That's a lie on your part. First, it's nothing personal but a reiteration of what a ton of physicists like Zeilinger say and have published in physics journals and what Einstein had a problem with when he realized the theory predicted a violation of locality.
Secondly, it's not metaphysics unless you want to say mainstream physics has moved into metaphysics. Either way, it's part and parcel of peer-reviewed papers in refereed journals and part of mainstream quantum physics, not some "personal metaphysics" of mine.
As can be seen from the above, there is not a microgram of truth in
randman's repeated accusations that I claim the Copenhagen interpretations preserve locality and realism. I didn't even mention Copenhagen in the quotations
randman offered as his alleged proof of my claim, and
randman didn't mention Copenhagen in the quoted remarks to which I was responding.
Perhaps
randman thinks I should have known that
randman believes the Copenhagen interpretation so strongly that he thinks it is hard science, or that all who do not share his personal belief in that interpretation should be cast into outer darkness. If so, I can only weep and gnash my teeth.
In what follows,
randman is quoting
Philosaur:
RONG. QM only violates local realism under specific interpretations of the experimental results (such as the CI). The experimental results themselves DO NOT VIOLATE ANY LAWS.
More abject confusion on your part. So all the scientific papers disagreeing with you are just WRONG, eh?
Men like Anton Zeilinger conducting quantum teleportation experiments to develop quantum computers are just a bunch of crackpots, cuz this evo says it must be that way?
No.
Philosaur meant exactly what he said: That QM violates local realism only under certain interpretations such as Copenhagen. Under certain other interpretations, such as modal or many-worlds interpretations, locality is not violated.
randman's reaction to
Philosaur's correct statement was ignorant. Yes, any scientific paper that disagrees with
Philosaur's correct statement is wrong on that specific point, but scientific papers very rarely make sweeping claims about local realism under all metaphysical interpretations of quantum mechanics. Such sweeping claims are far more common in the popular literature, which is presumably where
randman obtained his impressions of quantum mechanics.
Copenhagen is not the pure, unfettered, obviously-more-parsimonious option. It is saddled with ugly concessions that no physicist WANTS to make--like getting rid of localism--in the same way that MWI has the "ugly" feature of multiple universes.
Oh my......now you've done and agreed with me after saying all this time I was making stuff up.
Have you considered why so many brilliant men either get rid of "physical laws" or invoke a myriad of multiverses?
I
t's because of what the theory and experiments show. They are not just imagining this out of their backsides as some metaphysical speculation.
All viable interpretations of quantum mechanics agree with experiment, because interpretations that disagree with experiment are not viable.
No viable interpretation of quantum mechanics agrees with our common sense, which means our common sense is wrong. Different interpretations of QM salvage different parts of our common sense while giving up on others. The Copenhagen interpretation gives up on locality, while modal interpretations (may) abandon determinism and many-worlds interpretations abandon the notion of a
fixed unique objective reality (which, judging from one of his comments above, may have nothing to do with
randman's personal notion of objective reality).
None of those interpretations are pulling things out of their backsides, but
randman's apparent insistence that the Copenhagen interpretation be accorded special status can only be done by pulling that belief out of his core being.