Tez
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2001
- Messages
- 1,104
Sorry, was in Iran the last couple of weeks, and had a complete laptop crash while there. Spent the last couple of days I've been back recovering. Before I did lose the laptop I found JREF wasnt blocked from there which was good (in fact no western news source semed to be either).
No. This tells me you dont know the math at all behind what youre saying. Which makes answering anything else you say probably pointless. Care to back up your claim with an equation?
Where the hell are you getting this nonsense? One of the most amazing things of non-relativistic QM is that it doesn't violate these things despite its nonlocality. Understanding why is presumably a deep insight we've failed to achieve. Care to explicitly back up your claim with an equation?
I have no clue what you were trying to get at with the next bit of your examples/questions. If you can phrase a clearer question I will try and answer.
Unbelievable. I'm through arguing with you until you demonstrate you actually understand some of the math behind QM. Everything in the above paragraph is based on a complete misconception of how collapse works in quantum mechanics.
For the record, in case anyone is actually interested, I think it is clear Bohr misunderstood Einstein's steering arguments (which pre and post dated EPR), but did understand the EPR paper. His response to EPR does not work with the other arguments, as many, many people have pointed out. Somehow there is this mythology built around EPR that Bohr answered everything Einstein came up with. But with a lot of these discussions, such as the photon in a box thing was written many years later by Bohr, and do not concord with Einsteins correspondence of the time.
e.g For the photon in a box, at that time (similar time to EPR paper) in letters to people what he was saying was "look, after the photon has gone I can choose either to weigh the box, and therefore determine the color of the photon (which is by now far away) or I can measure its time of exit (which determines its spatial location - so for instance when it would hit a remote mirror). That seemed like a paradox to Einstein, for whom the color of a photon and its temporal location should both have been physically real, and therefore how could his observations on the box suddenly seemed to affect the physical properties of the remote photon. (Note this has nothing to do with challenging the uncertainty principle, nor did he "forget" general relativity, which is not actually needed anyway because gravitational time dilation is derivable without full GR from Newtonian potential considerations).
Its a beautiful "paradox" from which anyone can learn a lot about quantum mechanics.
Read some of Don Howard's (historian/philosopher at Pittsburg) papers for several nice pedagogical discussion of such things.
Regarding people borrowing my idea: Its certainly true someone could. In fact I've discussed it with several well known people, and made some notes which have been emailed around, which is some protection I guess (though also more of a risk - I certainly lost one semi-important idea this way). At the moment I see it as simply a mathematical curiosity I'll eventually flesh out (when I find an unwary student!) into something maybe even useful.
Here's just some quick questions that only need one-word answers. Please don't spend time typing up much more than that. This kind of discussion can time-consuming and we won't change each other's viewpoints, I am sure of that, as we didn't the times before.
So, doesn't the collapse approach add nonsensical negative probabilities to the theory?
No. This tells me you dont know the math at all behind what youre saying. Which makes answering anything else you say probably pointless. Care to back up your claim with an equation?
Now that'd be some good, necessary mathematics right there if it does. It certainly adds the paradoxes of faster-than-light and backwards-in-time effects to violate special relativity and apparent causality.
Where the hell are you getting this nonsense? One of the most amazing things of non-relativistic QM is that it doesn't violate these things despite its nonlocality. Understanding why is presumably a deep insight we've failed to achieve. Care to explicitly back up your claim with an equation?
I have no clue what you were trying to get at with the next bit of your examples/questions. If you can phrase a clearer question I will try and answer.
I have to assume these quantum computer scientists are aware that what you throw away with a collapse approach can come back to haunt what is kept if something is small enough and isolated enough? The collapsed state would then fail to be "the correct state" if the mathematics don't describe all that can cause later effects. Von Neumann wasn't waving his hands around with that one.
Unbelievable. I'm through arguing with you until you demonstrate you actually understand some of the math behind QM. Everything in the above paragraph is based on a complete misconception of how collapse works in quantum mechanics.
Yeah, and Bohr never understood EPR either, Einstein forgot general relativity in an argument against QM, Feynman misunderstood the fundamentals of calculus, and so on. Who knows, maybe even von Neumann did hand-waving consciousness arguments?
For the record, in case anyone is actually interested, I think it is clear Bohr misunderstood Einstein's steering arguments (which pre and post dated EPR), but did understand the EPR paper. His response to EPR does not work with the other arguments, as many, many people have pointed out. Somehow there is this mythology built around EPR that Bohr answered everything Einstein came up with. But with a lot of these discussions, such as the photon in a box thing was written many years later by Bohr, and do not concord with Einsteins correspondence of the time.
e.g For the photon in a box, at that time (similar time to EPR paper) in letters to people what he was saying was "look, after the photon has gone I can choose either to weigh the box, and therefore determine the color of the photon (which is by now far away) or I can measure its time of exit (which determines its spatial location - so for instance when it would hit a remote mirror). That seemed like a paradox to Einstein, for whom the color of a photon and its temporal location should both have been physically real, and therefore how could his observations on the box suddenly seemed to affect the physical properties of the remote photon. (Note this has nothing to do with challenging the uncertainty principle, nor did he "forget" general relativity, which is not actually needed anyway because gravitational time dilation is derivable without full GR from Newtonian potential considerations).
Its a beautiful "paradox" from which anyone can learn a lot about quantum mechanics.
Read some of Don Howard's (historian/philosopher at Pittsburg) papers for several nice pedagogical discussion of such things.
Regarding people borrowing my idea: Its certainly true someone could. In fact I've discussed it with several well known people, and made some notes which have been emailed around, which is some protection I guess (though also more of a risk - I certainly lost one semi-important idea this way). At the moment I see it as simply a mathematical curiosity I'll eventually flesh out (when I find an unwary student!) into something maybe even useful.