Schneibster
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Ah, I see. Just making sure you really get it! 
But the author seems to be doing away with observers altogether by putting it all down to interfering "particles".This is an assertion without evidence. Quantum mechanics does not distinguish "observers" from any other kind of interaction.
Then where is the distinguishing characteristic between quantum physics and classical physics if it is all just "interacting particles" - by which, in this context, we mean "the actual measurement interfering with the result"?Yes. And there's no actual reason to assume otherwise [that the observer has no effect over and above the affect of the interacting particles].
So you don't see anything "mysterious" in the double-slit experiment? (see above)Good for her. We can do with a little less talk about the "mystery" of quantum mechanics. Especially when the "mystery" only ever happens at stages where we can't keep doing the calculations for purely practical reasons.
Sorry I don't understand this sentence. In any case, this is an interpretation of what happens and is not really important compared to what actually happens."Collapse" is like the man behind the curtain in the Wizard of Oz: we can only believe it happens in cases where we can't watch it happen.
No, there are other equally valid interpretations. But the point was that the observer does play a role. You disagree but you haven't stated why.I disagree. Collapse of the wave function (meaning a discontinuous change in the quantum state of the system, rather than a continuous time evolution of the system according to the Schrodinger equation) is simply not necessary to explain any experimental results.
I don't think we are.
Perhaps, in order to avoid confusion with the meanings of the words we use, we need an example that demonstrates that it is the actual observation that causes the collapse of the wave function, and that it cannot be put down to the simple interaction of particles.
It's the double-slit experiment of course!
If you send a stream of electrons from a source towards a photographic plate with a wall containing two slits or holes between the source and the plate, an interference pattern typical of waves results. If the electrons are emitted one at a time, the same wave interference pattern results. It's as if the electron departs the source as a particle and arrives at the plate as a particle, but travels through the slits as a wave. The wave passes through both slits and forms an interference pattern on the plate.
Now, suppose we place detectors at the holes. What happens then? Well, as you know, the wave interference pattern disappears and, instead, we have a pattern that we would expect if particles were passing through the holes. The electron leaves the source as a particle, travels towards the hole as a wave, and arrives at the hole as a particle. You might say that the act of detecting/measuring the arrival of the wave at the hole collapses it to a particle. In other words, it's all caused by interacting particles.
But now, suppose we place a detector at only one of the holes. What happens now? Again a pattern typical of particles passing through the holes is obtained. But, if a million particles pass through the holes, 500,000 pass through the hole where there is no detector. There are no particles interfering with these 500,000 electrons, yet they all behave like particles instead of waves.
Therefore, the effect cannot not be just due to the interaction of particles as claimed by the author of that article, but by the observation itself. Or, at the very least, something other than just the interaction of particles. If it was just interacting particles, how would it be any different from classical physics.
It seems rather late in this thread to be making this point, but I don't think it's been made explicit thus far...
The OP cites an example where someone has got into the classic muddle between the simple idea that observation disturbs that which is being observed, which is trivial and does not really related to QM, and the uncertainty that is embodied in the Heisenberg relations which means that a combination certain pairs of parameters cannot be measured beyond a certain level of precision even in principle and also that the closer one confines one member of that pair to a certain value the less well-defined is the other. The latter is QM uncertainty (as I understand it and can briefly express it) the former is just an issue of experimental design (though I suppose it meets QM uncertainty in the limit).
It has been said that the atom consists of a nucleus and electrons moving around the nucleus; it has also been stated that the concept of an electronic orbit is doubtful. One could argue that it should at least in principle be possible to observe the electron in its orbit. One should simply look at the atom through a microscope of a very high revolving power, then one would see the electron moving in its orbit. Such a high revolving power could to be sure not be obtained by a microscope using ordinary light, since the inaccuracy of the measurement of the position can never be smaller than the wave length of the light. But a microscope using ~~-rays with a wave length smaller than the size of the atom would do. Such a microscope has not yet been constructed but that should not prevent us from discussing the ideal experiment.
Is the first step, the translation of the result of the observation into a probability function, possible? It is possible only if the uncertainty relation is fulfilled after the observation. The position of the electron will be known with an accuracy given by the wave length of the y-ray. The electron may have been practically at rest before the observation. But in the act of observation at least one light quantum of the y-ray must have passed the microscope and must first have been deflected by the electron. Therefore, the electron has been pushed by the light quantum, it has changed its momentum and its velocity, and one can show that the uncertainty of this change is just big enough to guarantee the validity of the uncertainty relations. Therefore, there is no difficulty with the first step.
The observation itself changes the probability function discontinuously; it selects of all possible events the actual one that has taken place. Since through the observation our knowledge of the system has changed discontinuously, its mathematical representation also has undergone the discontinuous change and we speak of a 'quantum jump'. When the old adage 'Natura non facit saltus' is used as a basis for criticism of quantum theory, we can reply that certainly our knowledge can change suddenly and that this fact justifies the use of the term 'quantum jump'.
Therefore, the transition from the 'possible' to the 'actual' takes place during the act of observation. If we want to describe what happens in an atomic event, we have to realize that the word 'happens' can apply only to the observation, not to the state of affairs between two observations. It applies to the physical, not the psychical act of observation, and we may say that the transition from the 'possible' to the 'actual' takes place as soon as the interaction of the object with the measuring device, and thereby with the rest of the world, has come into play; it is not connected with the act of registration of the result by the mind of the observer. The discontinuous change in the probability function, however, takes place with the act of registration, because it is the discontinuous change of our knowledge in the instant of registration that has its image in the discontinuous change of the probability function.
Fine, then I'll prove you're a fool instead of just implying it.
Do me a favor though; try to avoid looking like even more of one when I'm done by making more accusations of ad hominem attacks.

"To put it in crudely simplistic terms, as soon as the scientist switches on the light to see what’s going on, other particles, like photons, get in the way. It is the photons that are responsible for messing up the results, not the thoughts of the experimenter."
This statement is factually incorrect. It is not the means of measurement that make it impossible to determine the values of conjugate variables. They are inherently indeterminate; this is a basic characteristic of quanta, the nature of reality in the quantum realm, not an effect of measurement. Period.
Therefore, the effect cannot not be just due to the interaction of particles as claimed by the author of that article, but by the observation itself. Or, at the very least, something other than just the interaction of particles. If it was just interacting particles, how would it be any different from classical physics.
Then where is the distinguishing characteristic between quantum physics and classical physics if it is all just "interacting particles" - by which, in this context, we mean "the actual measurement interfering with the result"?
So you don't see anything "mysterious" in the double-slit experiment? (see above)
It's all just common sense?
No, there are other equally valid interpretations.
But the point was that the observer does play a role. You disagree but you haven't stated why.
This is what she says:She did not state that the effect is just due to the interaction of particles. You simply chose to interpret it that way.
Let's just say that I'm becoming less certain about the role of "the observer" but more certain that it's not just "interacting particles".Unless you think that the placement of a single detector only eliminates the interference pattern if a human eventually becomes aware of the results (an interpretation that (afaict) is impossible to distinguish).
Whether you call it observation or measurement, in order to gather a specific kind of information, we need to interact in some way with what we want to measure or observe - to "shine a light on it". At a quantum level, the process of measurement then interferes with what we can know, in the way that has already been described by others.
Yes, I'm becoming a little fuzzier on that point.Yes, it is "spooky" that we can know something about quanta/wavicles/wave-particles that we don't actually interact with, but that doesn't mean that the means of observing or measuring requires a conscious observer
She was making the point that not only can consciousness not shape reality, it does not even affect the outcome of quantum events. Of course, if it can't do the second, it certainly can not do the first. My point (of view) was that consciousness can affect quantum events by causing the wave function to collapse, but that it cannot shape reality because it cannot control the purely random nature of the collapse....but that doesn't mean that the means of observing or measuring requires a conscious observer (her point), or that the outcome is pre-determined by the means of interacting (your point).
Okay, what you are saying is that the experimental set-up determines what the outcome will be: If the experiment is set it up with no detectors, we get an interference pattern. If we set it up with detectors at both slits, we get a particle scatter pattern. If we set it up with a detector at only one slit, we get a particle scatter pattern. But I wonder why it happens in the third set-up when half the time nothing is being detected and no particles are interacting but the same interference pattern results as in the second set-up. If it's not interacting particles, what is it? I'm not happy to just leave it with "it's just that expereimental set-up, unless I really have to)...or that the outcome is pre-determined by the means of interacting (your point).
Yes, this was not the point of disagreement.And both of these points counteract the idea that QM confirms that human consciousness creates reality as claimed in "The Secret".
She was making the point that not only can consciousness not shape reality, it does not even affect the outcome of quantum events. Of course, if it can't do the second, it certainly can not do the first. My point (of view) was that consciousness can affect quantum events by causing the wave function to collapse, but that it cannot shape reality because it cannot control the purely random nature of the collapse.
The Schrodinger equation is not classical. But it is completely deterministic. There's no need to look beyond it to find the difference between classical mechanics and quantum mechanics, and it does not contain any notion of "collapse" or "observer".
It is most certainly not common sense in terms of it matching our every-day experience with the world. But neither is it mysterious in the sense that there's some step in the process which we cannot fathom...
Because nobody can even define an observer...or conciousness.
Okay, but I'm still having trouble with the double slit single detector scenario. If the system detects/interacts with only half of the particles/waves, why don't we see a mixture of interference and particle scatter patterns on the plate?This viewpoint isn't disprovable, but it's quite problematic. As you probably realize, it privileges something (conciousness) which we can't define in any rigorous sense. And it's unnecessary as well. While collapse of the wave function is useful as a practical matter, it is not contained within quantum mechanics, and we only resort to it in cases where our calculations are incomplete. The simpler explanation, therefore, is that collapse as such (meaning a non-deterministic change in the quantum state of the system) never happens at all, and that the apparent effect observed is merely the deterministic interaction of the quantum state of the system with a random initial quantum state of our measurement apparatus.
She was making the point that not only can consciousness not shape reality, it does not even affect the outcome of quantum events. Of course, if it can't do the second, it certainly can not do the first. My point (of view) was that consciousness can affect quantum events by causing the wave function to collapse, but that it cannot shape reality because it cannot control the purely random nature of the collapse.
Okay, what you are saying is that the experimental set-up determines what the outcome will be: If the experiment is set it up with no detectors, we get an interference pattern. If we set it up with detectors at both slits, we get a particle scatter pattern. If we set it up with a detector at only one slit, we get a particle scatter pattern. But I wonder why it happens in the third set-up when half the time nothing is being detected and no particles are interacting but the same interference pattern results as in the second set-up. If it's not interacting particles, what is it? I'm not happy to just leave it with "it's just that expereimental set-up, unless I really have to)
Okay, but I'm still having trouble with the double slit single detector scenario. If the system detects/interacts with only half of the particles/waves, why don't we see a mixture of interference and particle scatter patterns on the plate?
Therefore, the effect cannot not be just due to the interaction of particles as claimed by the author of that article, but by the observation itself. Or, at the very least, something other than just the interaction of particles. If it was just interacting particles, how would it be any different from classical physics.
This is what she says:
"To put it in crudely simplistic terms, as soon as the scientist switches on the light to see what’s going on, other particles, like photons, get in the way. It is the photons that are responsible for messing up the results."
It seems pretty clear to me that she IS saying that the effect is JUST due to the interaction of particles (unless "crudely simplistic terms" means that she is actually simplifiying it to the point of it being false). But, if she is not saying that the effect is JUST due to the interaction of particles, what else is she saying (or implying) (or leaving unsaid)?
Let's just say that I'm becoming less certain about the role of "the observer" but more certain that it's not just "interacting particles".![]()
But, if you are correct in saying that she is not saying it's just interacting particles, I guess I have no argument. On the other hand there are others here who are saying the opposite - that she IS saying that it's JUST interacting particles and that she IS correct in saying this!
Your "in some way" must be pretty broard to encompass the situation where no particle is actually interfered with. I am talking, of course, about when the particle travels through one slit while the detector fails to detect (and therefore interact with) a particle at the other slit.
She was making the point that not only can consciousness not shape reality, it does not even affect the outcome of quantum events. Of course, if it can't do the second, it certainly can not do the first. My point (of view) was that consciousness can affect quantum events by causing the wave function to collapse, but that it cannot shape reality because it cannot control the purely random nature of the collapse.
Okay, what you are saying is that the experimental set-up determines what the outcome will be:
If the experiment is set it up with no detectors, we get an interference pattern. If we set it up with detectors at both slits, we get a particle scatter pattern. If we set it up with a detector at only one slit, we get a particle scatter pattern. But I wonder why it happens in the third set-up when half the time nothing is being detected and no particles are interacting but the same interference pattern results as in the second set-up. If it's not interacting particles, what is it? I'm not happy to just leave it with "it's just that expereimental set-up, unless I really have to)
Yes, this was not the point of disagreement.
There is a subtlety here that is worth mentioning.Let's just say that I'm becoming less certain about the role of "the observer" but more certain that it's not just "interacting particles".![]()
That was how I read it, too. But I think that the point is, she never made any reference to anything BUT interacting particles- specifically, she never referred to uncertainty, which is not about interacting particles, but about the parameters of quanta of which particles are merely convenient representations that are not complete.But, if you are correct in saying that she is not saying it's just interacting particles, I guess I have no argument. On the other hand there are others here who are saying the opposite - that she IS saying that it's JUST interacting particles and that she IS correct in saying this!
Again, decoherence is the idea that a conscious observer is not needed. An interaction changes the wave function forever, irreversibly. It doesn't matter whether anyone was looking or not. This idea underlies all of the successful interpretations of quantum mechanics; ones that could not accommodate it have fallen by the wayside.She was making the point that not only can consciousness not shape reality, it does not even affect the outcome of quantum events. Of course, if it can't do the second, it certainly can not do the first. My point (of view) was that consciousness can affect quantum events by causing the wave function to collapse, but that it cannot shape reality because it cannot control the purely random nature of the collapse.
Another subtlety. Note that even if there is only a detector at one slit, if a photon is detected at the target but not detected at that slit, then it must have gone through the other. As soon as you can state which slit it went through, even if that is only by process of elimination, you eliminate the interference.Okay, what you are saying is that the experimental set-up determines what the outcome will be: If the experiment is set it up with no detectors, we get an interference pattern. If we set it up with detectors at both slits, we get a particle scatter pattern. If we set it up with a detector at only one slit, we get a particle scatter pattern. But I wonder why it happens in the third set-up when half the time nothing is being detected and no particles are interacting but the same interference pattern results as in the second set-up. If it's not interacting particles, what is it? I'm not happy to just leave it with "it's just that expereimental set-up, unless I really have to)
I believe that that was one of the Brian Greene Elegant Universe series of programs.I saw something on PBS once (maybe a NOVA program--I don't remember), where they had the "Quantum Cafe" where people were basically the quanta. People could go from here to there without ever existing in between, events may or may not happen in equal measure, time wouldn't work the way you normally think of it, etc. They were using it to illustrate points about quantum physics, but I found it more useful as an illustration of the absurdity of applying quantum physics to the world of human-scale events.