DuckTapeFileMan
Thinker
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2005
- Messages
- 208
How am I misrepresenting those ideas?
From my link:DuckTapeFileMan said:How am I misrepresenting those ideas?
Then you write:While there are a very few people who claim that a "consciousness" is necessary to "observe" something in a quantum mechanical sense, practically no physicists believe this.
Instead, all that is needed to be counted as an "observer" is something that is much more complicated than the object which is being observed. A speck of dust could act as an observer to a photon, for example; you don't need a consciousness.
But as was stated in the link consciousness is irrelevent to the interaction. Assuming that was what you meant by "that is where conscious beings live".this is my point. There has to be an "interacting with the environment", and that is where conscious beings live.
Ashles said:But anyway, are we agreed that consciousness is not required for interaction?
DuckTapeFileMan said:well, I don't know if I agree, I am just following the argument of my theory through.
I really don't know whether consciousness is required or not.
In my theory
the particlewave interacts with a large particle(from your link)
and is thus collapsed
this must in turn have an effect on the larger particle(surely?)
then this effect can have an effect on the rest of the Universe as in the butterfly effect.
It is a theory, but a massive amount of evidence backs it up.I assumed the quote from your link was considered a fact and was not someone's theory.
DuckTapeFileMan said:
In my theory
the particlewave interacts with a large particle(from your link)
and is thus collapsed
this must in turn have an effect on the larger particle(surely?)
then this effect can have an effect on the rest of the Universe as in the butterfly effect.
DuckTapeFileMan said:The butterfly effect, I took to mean
the inability to make long range forcasts due to the amount of noise(butterflys) in a system.
As far as I was aware it didn't really have anything to do with huricanes, that was just an extreem example.
As for mars, that may be true or it may not be, that is why I said "world" in the opening post.
DuckTapeFileMan said:That's not strictly true anymore about mars, as there is a little remote control vehicle there and that would have the same effect.
DuckTapeFileMan said:It is said that observation collapses wave functions for atomic particles.
Is consciousness necessary for observation to take place?
Can a camera without film "observe you"
Theory
That activity at the subatomic level can be symbolically represented at the macroscopic level.
For example a street scene or a flock of birds in the sky or a beach with waves crashing on it.
This "representation" could be on the other side of the world but could then be observed via a conscious being(even a fly) and so collapse the uncertainty wave function activity on the other side of the world.
In this theory the macro-scopic world becomes a theater for the subatomic world.
This sets up an interaction between the microscopic(sub-atomic)and the macroscopic worlds.
In this theory the pre-conscious universe had no wittnesses and so these wave functions couldn't collapse, instead of collapsing many other Universes were created.
When the first conscious(meaning biological being with freewill) came into being then wave functions were able to be collapse and there was a relationship between the microscopic and the macroscopic.
In this theory any part of the subatomic Universe may be acted out in any other part of the Universe, how ever far away. This may be at odds with Einstein's speed of light restriction, you may think, but this acting out is brought to the you via entanglement which doesn't involve relativity(IIRC or as far as I am aware).
[/theory]
I am not saying that this is true but I put it down as a possibility.
I really can't believe that there is more than one of any individual although I can believe that there is more than one universe.
DuckTapeFileMan said:I don't mean freewill in terms of intelligence.
I consider all animals have a level of freewill because their brains are neural networks.
So even a fly will fit this requirement.
Originally posted by Dredred Edited to add:
I'm now reading another thread , and i see what i said has already been said much better, and DuckTapeFileMan's theory had already been proven wrong before he started this thread. So this thead is redundant, and i shouldn't have bothered to reply. [/B]
Well to be fair I think they would probably encourage you to read about the subject first.DuckTapeFileMan said:well, even the site that that post links to encourages the reader to "keep thinking" about the subject.