JustGeoff said:Ian says he has been banned
According to the text below his avatar, he has been suspended.
It only takes 10 seconds to check, Geoff.
JustGeoff said:Ian says he has been banned
CFLarsen said:If I refer to your previous posts, then feel free to inform me precisely which posts you still want to be part of your argumentation, and which you do not. But don't call me a liar, because I refer to those of your previous posts that you now have distanced yourself from. You have to tell us which of your previous posts - or claims - that you still want to stand by, and which you don't. It's not my problem, Geoff!
I can understand from your post that you do not claim anymore that the document appeared on your computer by supernatural means.
Are you seriously still claiming that QM explains this secret experience of yours? Why?
JustGeoff said:I don't think you knew what I was claiming. That may have been my fault, perhaps it wasn't clear. I am stating that reverse causality is indeed within the bounds of scientific possibility, and I have provided two papers which DO back that up.
JustGeoff said:By someone who has made a mistake about what I actually claimed?![]()
JustGeoff said:Pragmatist, you have now also gone one step too far. Either you are claiming to have "clobbered me" based on a mistaken understanding of what I originally claimed, or you are claiming to have "clobbered me" based on the fact that you, who I don't know from Adam, can claim that published peer-reviewed papers on QM are wrong and you are right.
JustGeoff said:My understanding of QM may well be considerably inferior to yours, but I am not sure it is so inferior that I do not understand how it relates to the wider questions I am interested in answering. The problem is quite simple, and regards the identity and nature of the observer, an issue about which you yourself appear less eager to talk about.
JustGeoff said:Unless you are going to tell me that reverse causality is impossible, I was right.
JustGeoff said:Personally, I think you should tell me whether you actually understand what I was claiming, because you don't seem to.
JustGeoff said:I probably do owe Sam an apology, for the speed at which I claimed "I am right and you are wrong". I am afraid I am rather weary of people claiming that certain phenomena are scientifically impossible when they are nothing of the sort. In this case, I jumped the gun and I also directed my fire at someone who probably didn't deserve it. For this I am happy to apologise.
If you think I am going to accept I am wrong about the possibility of reverse causality in QM, you will have to do better than coming here and claiming that published papers on QM are written by people who don't understand it.
JustGeoff said:POSTED ON BEHALF OF IAN.
Ian says he has been banned, and asked me to post this. To be fair, if he has indeed been banned then I won't post any more messages from him. :
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Pragmatist: If you want to understand what Schrodinger thought then go through the WHOLE of his work. You will find that Schrodinger was a hardened materialist
Hmmmm . .
From Schrodinger's "My View of the World".
"In all the world, there is no kind of framework within which we can find
consciousness in the plural; this is simply something we construct because
of the spatio-temporal plurality of individuals, but it is a false
construction. Because of it, all philosophy succumbs again and again to the
hopeless conflict between the theoretically unavoidable acceptance of
Berkeleian idealism and its complete uselessness for understanding the real
world. The only solution to this conflict, in so far as any is available to
us at all, lies in the ancient wisdom of the Upanishads."
The Upanishads? Hardened materialists? The most pre-eminent of
commentators on the Upanishads, the ninth-century scholar and mystic
Shankara, wrote: "The world, filled with attachments and aversions, and the
rest, is a dream: it appears to be real as long as one is ignorant, but
becomes unreal when one is awake."
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Let me say at the outset, that in this discourse, I am opposing not a few special statements of quantum mechanics / quantum theory held today, I am opposing as it were the whole of it, I am opposing its basic views that have been shaped 25 years ago, when Max Born put forward his probability interpretation, which was accepted by almost everybody.
JustGeoff said:OK, I'll make this easy. I stand by none of them. My knoweldge of various fields and my personal opinions about many things have changed a great deal in the past two years and it is safe to say that I would now not choose to have made any of the claims I made two years ago, unless you have heard me make them in the past 6 months. Just to be crystal clear, it is not that I am saying that nothing happened to me. At the time, I was simply relating almost everything as I experienced it, with all the rather obvious shock and confusion that was involved. I was being as honest as I could at the time, but very unwise about where I posted my thoughts, and the manner in which I was communicating with people. So in order for us to be able to continue talking I am making it quite clear that I have no intention of "standing by" anything I said at the time as being anything other than how I understood it at the time. You are now talking to a person for whom those experiences are two years old. I am not now in a state of shock or undergoing major belief-system changes. So it is simple. You should discard all of it, and listen to the person you are actually talking to right now.
Agreed?
JustGeoff said:I do not accept the term "supernatural" refers to any phenomena which actually exists. I believe it is all natural. However, some things which are natural can be misinterpreted as supernatural by people who do not understand why they are happening. This is quite an important point, and I need you to understand it.
JustGeoff said:I believe there are some categories that need defining.
Non-existent phenomena :
Some reported phenomena are simply the result of people deliberately trying to make money by fooling people. e.g. "cold reading". I am not interested in these things at all, because I don't think there is anything real behind them. They are not supernatural phenomena, because there are no actual phenomena, just lies.
JustGeoff said:Natural phenomena :
Everything which actually does happen is being driven by natural phenomena. These include phenomena happening because of natural physical laws, and other phenomena which manifest via physical laws, but are being driven by natural metaphysical laws. There is a continuum of these phenomena.
JustGeoff said:Nearly all are being driven by physical law on its own, with very little being determined by metaphysical law. The more a phenomena is being driven by the metaphysical law, the less frequently it is seen - so the more unusual and "apparently paranormal/supernatural" it is, the less often it occurs or is likely to occur.
JustGeoff said:However, even on the odd occasions when something very strange indeed happens, it is still being driven by the same metaphysical and physical laws as all other real phenomena.
JustGeoff said:I can't deal in your black-and-white categories of "normal/paranormal" and "natural/supernatural". If I have to do so, then I have to say that everything is natural and normal, even though I believe some things can happen that you don't.
JustGeoff said:Without QM, I find it difficult to understand how it could have happened. In order for it to be integrated into my belief system, I have to find a way for causality to be working differently to normal physical causality.
JustGeoff said:QM provides the possibility for new forms of causality, not currently understood by science,
The question of "qualified" or not is irrelevant. The issue is whether they really UNDERSTAND it. And in that respect I would say "yes", there are some people who are highly qualified in quantum physics who don't really understand it. And I believe that many true quantum physicists would be the first to admit this. In fact, why don't you look up Richard Feynman, arguably one of the most brilliant of all Quantum Physicists? He used to start every lecture by telling the students that they wouldn't understand a word of what he was going to tell them, but assured them that it really didn't matter because he didn't understand it either!
What that paper says in essence is that there is an ongoing argument between physicists as to whether ANY kind of reverse causality is possible. The paper explicitly mentions that there is NO proof whatsoever of reverse causality and suggests an experiment that may possibly be performed to determine whether or not it is even possible.
The paper explicitly mentions that there is NO proof whatsoever of reverse causality and suggests an experiment that may possibly be performed to determine whether or not it is even possible.
How you can use that as an alleged "proof" that it IS possible is beyond me!
Ah, yes, I just looked him up. It seems that his views are not very popular. He seems to be a closet solipsist trying to assert that "quantum reality" is all in the mind.
If you do a search for comments on his work you will see it described in various places (including other peer reviewed papers) as "counterfactual", "deceptive magic", "conflating empirical or psychological facts with physical facts in a deceptive and delusory way" etc. I can't and won't comment on whether or not he is right, I don't know, but I do know that his claims are not unopposed.
All the above aside, it doesn't really matter whether or not you DO manage to establish that "reverse causation" is possible at the quantum level or not. Even if it IS, that only applies to microscopic quantum systems, you cannot possibly extrapolate that to the macroscopic world.
It may well be possible for an electron to appear to go back a short way in time. That's a world of difference from claiming wholesale changes of macroscopic reality.
O.K. no problem. But bear in mind that as this is one of the most basic underlying principles, the fact that you don't understand that is highly significant to the validity of your claims.
I don't hold that against you, but if you are REALLY interested in finding a rational explanation I can't see how you can simply discard the POSSIBILITY that it was a delusion. You do understand that your current position appears to simply consist of trying to bend facts to fit a pre selected hypothesis. That's pseudoscience.
If macroscopic reverse causation were found, OF COURSE it would require a re-write of physics! I don't know why you persist in this claim.
Look, chemical processes are known to occur because they involve changes of state from low to high entropy. If reverse causation were found it would completely demolish chemistry for a start because it would imply that kinetic processes could run from high to LOW entropy states.
Hey, I just thought of something! If you witnessed true reverse causation then you MUST have seen things falling upwards etc! Did you? And if not, why not?
I honestly don't know if reverse causality at the quantum level is possible or not. And I will state definitively here and now that I believe it IS impossible at the macroscopic level. So how am I accepting your premise?
And what if you DID find evidence that it was theoretically possible? How does that help anything? Lots of things are THEORETICALLY possible but never happen in practice.
It doesn't validate your experience in any way, so why bother.
If you are going to insist and maintain that it happened REGARDLESS (as you are doing) then what difference does it make to anyone - even you, whether it's possible in theory or not?
Good luck! By the way, Eddington was caught more than once indulging in pseudoscience.
His "analyses" of the fine structure constant immediately spring to mind. And Schrodinger may have held some unusual metaphysical opinions but he kept them well separated from his science. His scientific position bears little relation to the metaphysical woo woo that some people try to make him out to be.
One of his most famous quotes about the more metaphysical interpretations of quantum mechanics was: "I don't like it, and I'm sorry I ever had anything to do with it."
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Originally posted by JustGeoff
Plenty of scientific skeptics here have claimed it. There are just observations, they say, and no observers. If you try to defend hard metaphysical materialism then you can end up having to claim there is no metaphysical observer.
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Well I can only speak for myself. I should ask for proof that "other scientific skeptics here have claimed it", but I can't be bothered!
I have no idea what you mean by "metaphysical materialism" or "metaphysical observers", and to be honest I'm not interested in "metaphysical" anything.
What system? A system needs to be defined for the purposes of a specific experiment. A well designed experiment seeks to eliminate any effect of the observer as far as reasonably possible. And I am not aware that I have any trouble making sense of anything!
You seem to be very hung up on "ists" and "isms". What you say above makes little sense to me.
Listen, if I am going to do an experiment in the lab, I will use me. That's "I", "myself", "the person writing this" etc., etc. I don't NEED a definition of me!
I am all that I have and that's that. What's there to define? And why would I need to? I don't need to "define" myself when I eat a pizza or take a pee, so why would I need to "define" myself if I do an experiment?
I may well need one if I made such a claim. But I don't make such a claim. I don't believe a brain CAN collapse a wavefunction.
quote:
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Originally posted by JustGeoff
"Ego" is a bad word, because it has been used by other people in a very different sense. Schroedinger used it, but he also used "percipient" as in "that which percieves" - and that is a better word. He is talking about the fact that the thing which is doing the observing doesn't appear in the picture that is being observed. You see - if you agree with schroedinger on this then you cannot also claim that "the guy doing the measuring" is the observer because "the guy doing the measuring" does exist within our scientific picture of the world. We know what brains are. We can see ourselves. What we cannot see is the thing which is actually observing the picture.
So I'd like you to clarify to me how you resolve this apparent contradiction.
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All I see is that you appear to be confusing semantic levels of abstraction. That always leads to contradiction/paradox. But since I don't indulge in that confusion I don't SEE any contradiction or paradox.
I believe you may have misunderstood what Schrodinger said. I would suggest you try to express your idea in formal logic. I'll bet you can't. Because you'll end up with an oscillating loop. This is exactly the kind of error I have pointed out already in previous posts.
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Originally posted by JustGeoff
OK. So you are a hard determinist, yes?
Do you believe that the whole future of the world is therefore pre-defined?
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Again, you are too hung up on categorising people into your "ists" and "isms". I have no idea whether I am what YOU believe to be a "hard determinist". I doubt that I am (whatever it means).
I don't have any problem with "reality" in day to day life.
I don't step off cliffs whilst speculating about whether they are "real" or not! I don't need to get a metaphysical "definition" of a bus that's about to hit me - I just jump out the way because it seems like a good idea at the time! I'm not a philosopher - and I don't want to be one either. Questions of "what constitues reality" make no practical difference to my day to day scientific work. So I don't see what you're getting at.
I simply said that I believed there was no point in discussing philosophy - PARTICULARLY where solipsism may be involved. And there is a very fine line between claims about "consciousness affecting quantum states" and solipsism.
Why not? If you're willing to construct one in which reverse causation is possible I don't see why gravity should be sacrosanct! Ignoring of course the fact that gravity WOULD be reversed in reverse causation...
It seems to me that either there is an "objective" reality or there isn't.
If a "real" personal reality can overturn any part of an objective reality then strange things must be possible.
If they are not possible then there is no "personal reality" distinguishable from delusion - so I agree.
Pragmatist said:He repeatedly said that he couldn't accept "virtually smeared out" particles that only came into existence when observed. He believed that everything was part of the fundamental structure of space-time and that it had REAL PHYSICAL EXISTENCE that did not depend in any way on whether it was observed or not.
As long as you selectively choose to only read PARTS of what he said, you have no basis to understand him.
JustGeoff said:Pragmatist
I am very much aware of Richard Feynman. Yes, I have read his books too, and they are both interesting and amusing. Great guy. But I'm not going to accept your argument from authority. Basically here you are saying : "Screw qualifiactions, screw peer-reviews, I know more about this than any of you or any of them, so I'm right. I don't think anybody else would accept that. Arguments from authority fail instantly.
JustGeoff said:Then the rest of your post may have been a waste of time. The paper says the there is an ongoing argument about whether reverse causality is possible.
Unless you are seriously claiming to be so knowledgeable about QM that you already know what the outcome of that argument is, then that means that as things currently stand reverse causality in QM remains a distinct possibility.
JustGeoff said:I'm not going to accept your opinion as to the outcome of that debate, as you must surely understand. Remember, I was defending a repeated claim by Claus Larsen that the phenomena I reported broke the known laws of physics. It has now been established that we do not actually know for sure whether it breaks known all or whether it doesn't. All the rest of this nonsense is rather superfluous to me, because all I wanted to do was demonstrate that reverse causality cannot be ruled out as impossible, as Claus was trying to claim it was. It seemed to me that Sam then also claimed it was impossible, and I jumped down his throat, for which I have apologised.
Either way, the claim that reverse causality is impossible in QM depends on anticipating the result of a debate within physics which has not currently been resolved..
JustGeoff said:Good. If I claimed there was proof it was a mistake. I am happy to accept there is no proof.
I have not "proved it is possible". I have proved that it is incorrect to say that it is impossible, without relying on someones personal opinion..
JustGeoff said:Which may explain why people like you don't like him. Which makes it in turn highly likely that his views would meet serious opposition, regardless of whether they are accurate, for the very same reason I am encountering serious opposition here.
JustGeoff said:The trouble with this is that I know all too well what sort of reaction is provoked by these sorts of ideas. The worldview being defended at this site has a great deal in common with the worldview held by a great many (but far from all) scientists. And when the foundations of that worldview are challenged, as they are being challenged by idealistic and neutral monist interpretations of QM, there appears to be an extreme, almost fundamentalist, reaction from some quarters. So when I hear that the peer reviewer says things like "deceptive and delusory" I have to wonder whether the person reviewing it really has the philosophical background to be able to detach his metaphysical biases from the science itself. I don't think you have been able to do so, Pragmatist. I think you have made a claim which depends upon materialism being true, but haven't acknowledged that dependency. You have now expressed a personal dislike of idealism, which you refer to as "solipsism". At this point I should tell you that I am not an idealist, and certainly not a solipsist. I am a neutral monist.
JustGeoff said:Can't I?
JustGeoff said:As things stand, that isn't much different to a creationist telling me that whilst we have seen micro-evolution, we cannot extrapolate it up to macro-evolution. The problem is that nobody can define where to draw the line. Macro-evolution is just lots of micro-evolution. The same is true of QM. QM is a set of descriptive laws which can be tested only on very tiny scales. As I understand it, nobody has demonstrated that there is no such thing as macroscopic manifestations of QM.
JustGeoff said:Macro-scopic QM effects might just be lots of microcopic QM effects.
JustGeoff said:Remember that all I was doing was refuting a claim that something was impossible.
JustGeoff said:I don't see why that is so. You cannot get away with claiming you already know the outcome of the current debate about reverse causality. Since my claim only requires reverse causality to not be impossible, the fact that I don't have your understanding of QM is not actually that significant.
JustGeoff said:That may well be inevitable. I am not "bending facts". I am trying to stop people prematurely telling me that what happened to me was not possible because it broke the laws of physics. The truth is that nobody (apart from you, apparently) knows whether physics tells us that reverse causality can exist. Some physicists clearly think that it can, and it seems that they are physicists who share my sort of philosophical views, rather than yours.
JustGeoff said:Not neccesarily. It would depend on the nature of the reverse causality. It might well be that reverse causality exists, but in such a way that it does not cause existing physical law to be breached. The Universe may always "conspire" to keep things logically consistent, rather like the example in Hawkings book of a man who travel backward in time to try to shoot himself, only to miss because of an injury in his wrist which causes the bullet to graze his younger-self on the wrist, causing the injury. If reverse causality exists, be it microsopic or macroscopic or both, then it must exist in such a way as to leave the physical Universe appearing to operate in exactly the way it currently appears to operate.
JustGeoff said:Kinetic processes could still only run from high to low entropy states.
JustGeoff said:Basically, whatever changes are occuring because of reverse causality, at any one moment there is a consistent time-line - there is a physically consistent past and future. Not a pre-determined future and a completely fixed past, but at least one logically coherent past and at least one logically coherent future. In truth I don't believe that the past or the future exist at all. Like Schroedinger I believe the only thing which actually exists is the present moment. If the only thing which exists is the present moment then you can alter the past without causing a contradiction, provided the new past remains logically and physically consistent with the current present. No rewrite of chemistry is required, because from the point of view of the present, the past still leads to the present under existing physical law.
JustGeoff said:It wasn't that sort of causation. If you see my post to Claus you may understand what I mean.
JustGeoff said:I'm sure you do believe it is impossible, but I think that might have a great deal to do with your metaphysical beliefs, and not so much to do with your knowledge of QM. If I was a hard determinist or a hard materialist, I would also say that macro-scopic reverse causality was impossible. But I'm neither. I'm a neutral monist and about as far away from being a hard determinist as it is possible to be. I'm the other side of compatibilism - a believer in true free will. Perhaps you might accept that if you shared that sort of metaphysical position, you might take a different attitude to what is possible in QM.
JustGeoff said:Sure there are. But you can't go around claiming to have demolished somebodys argument by saying they aren't possible.
JustGeoff said:Why bother?
Because I was being told I must have been mad, because it couldn't happen, because it broke the laws of physics. Turns out it isn't quite so simple as that. You may believe it is impossible, but that is not the same thing.
JustGeoff said:It makes an enormous difference to me. Most of my life when I figured out something really important it was when I tried to resolve an inconsistency in what I believe. Why do you think I am going to study philosophy and cognitive science? Would the sort of person who chooses to study those two subjects together be likely to knowingly accept a belief system which includes contradictions? Of course not. It matters to me because I have to have a coherent belief system. It makes bugger all difference to anyone else. I'm only talking about it because I was forced to refute a claim that I experienced something that couldn't have happened.
JustGeoff said:He was a brilliant philosopher. I am not in the slightest bit surprised that you would accuse him of being pseudo-scientific. You'd probably accuse Bohm of the same thing. I'm not sure there is anything wrong with a synthesis of science and metaphysics, provided one acknowledges that it is a synthesis and not science.
JustGeoff said:Actually, he wasn't a metaphysical woo-woo, he was a very deep thinker and very well informed about metaphysics. I am afraid that some people think that "metaphysics" is actually a synonym of "woo-woo".
Schroedinger really was an idealist. Yes, he kept it seperate from his science. Idealism and materialism are not entirely incompatible. They can form two halves of a deeper theory. So you can do you science as a materialist but still be an idealist at a greater level of abstraction. Imagine a situation where idealism is true, but the observed physical Universe always behaves as if materialism where true. In the end, you might as well discard idealism and materialism and turn to neutral monism instead, as Betrand Russell did.
JustGeoff said:I guessed that might be the case. Unfortunately it is hard to avoid, because you defined "observer" to be "the guy doing the observations", and that involved an implicit metaphysical claim. Specifically, it required that "observer" means "human brain", which is a position only really compatible with metaphysical materialism. Unfortunately, as Schroedinger knew only too well....."all philosophy succumbs again and again to the hopeless conflict between the theoretically unavoidable acceptance of Berkeleian idealism and its complete uselessness for understanding the real world."
So for Schroedinger, and for me, brains can't be observers. And if they can't be observers, then they can't collapse wavefunctions.
JustGeoff said:You are now using "observer" in an entirely different sense to me. I am talking about what Schroedinger was refering to : The observer of our world-picture, which does not appear within that picture. That isn't a bod in a white coat.
JustGeoff said:Well, perhaps we can help each other then. You know more about QM than me but I understand ontology and metaphysics better than you. We have both agreed we have got to avoid confusing one for the other. Sounds like potential for progress to me.![]()
JustGeoff said:Oh boy!
You don't need a definition of your physical body, sure. But if you say "ME" you are opening up a can of philophical worms. What do you really mean? Your body? Your subjective thoughts? The thing witnessing those thoughts....the observer?
This does matter, and that is why Schoedinger wrote about it. That doesn't make him a "woo-woo". It makes him a very deep thinker who was not frightened to follow a line of reasoning all the way.
JustGeoff said:Under normal circumstances and for normal purposes I would agree with you. But these aren't normal circumstances. We are trying to get to grips with what is possibly the trickiest problem in science and the trickiest problem in philosophy. We have to be very carfeul indeed about what we hide away in our definitions. That is how we got into this mess in the first place.![]()
JustGeoff said:You believe it DOES?![]()
JustGeoff said:Nevertheless, I think it is there. Why are we talking at different levels of abstraction? Please elaborate on what you mean by "semantic confusion", so I know exactly what you are trying to say.
JustGeoff said:Perhaps that is because we are coming up against the problem of self-referentiality?
JustGeoff said:It means that the whole future of the Universe is already predestined. It means that if you could build a big enough computer (which you couldn't, as shown by Steven Wolfram) you could predict everything that is going to happen, perfectly.
JustGeoff said:Neither do I. This isn't day to day life. It is a discussion about QM and metaphysics.
JustGeoff said:I don't think Schroedinger wanted to be a philosopher, either. I'm not sure I want to be one, either. But he was forced down a certain line of reasoning, and I have been forced down the same line of reasoning. Now I want to understand the consequences much better than I do.
JustGeoff said:Not the sort of reverse causation I am talking about.
JustGeoff said:I Maybe it's not that simple. A lot of philosophy is about resolving dualities that turn out not to be dualities anymore. Saying there either "is or is not" an "objective reality" may be one of these illusory dualities - a false dichotomy. In fact, the resolution of subjective and objective is right at the core of the problem we are struggling with here. It is not a simple subject.
I find this post quite disturbing.
Aussie Thinker admits that JG is not a troll or insane( Aussie Thinker is obviously a psychiatrist and he is able to diagnose people on line) of course as an expert he leaves the door open for a "slight mental disorder"... and yet he finds disappointing the fact that another individual doesn't perceive the world the way he does.
Now THIS is disappointing.
Heh-heh. You must not have read much of my posting. Claus and I have very different styles. He is not my model, and I doubt very much that I am his.JustGeoff said:
If I were you I wouldn't be looking at Claus as an example to follow.
Um...not the best example to give to a social psychologist. Social psychologists have studies love for decades, and quite successfully. There are many things which seem at first glance to be beyond the reach of science, but which merely await the right experimental paradigm. I know for a fact that you would not get past the first post...if you never post that first post. Other than that scenario, I could make no guarantees. It would depend on what you wrote.
Mercutio, I'd not get past the first post. And just for the record, there are some things which really are personal, private and ineffable. They simply aren't communicable. It is like the feeling of being in love. Until you have been there, you cannot know what it is like because no words and no images are able to communicate that experiences. Once you get there, no words are needed.
I disagree. Any description is a starting point. No description is...well...nothing.Possibly the defining characteristic of what might be called "mystical experiences" is their ineffability. So I must take care what I say, and not just because I have no evidence to back it up. A bad description of what happened to me is worse than no description at all.
I cannot make any promises of acceptance without hearing the story! There is much I can accept, and there is a subset which I would consider "empirical claims" which are subject to stricter rules of evidence. In truth, I am interested in what you believe, and why. I doubt very much that any of that really needs the kind of support you speak of here. If it does, it does, though; if you believe things which fly in the face of evidence, I am all the more interested in understanding your reasons for doing so. My guess is that I am not the only one.You have asked me to do the impossible here. First you say "tell us your whole story". Then you say "Yes, you must support your story". Yet it is because I cannot support the story that I have refused to tell it! So this doesn't work. Either you must accept beforehand that I cannot support my story (with hard evidence) or it would be a bit silly of me to say anything, wouldn't it?
I disagree again. If you are hesitant to write because you do not want your logic assaulted...then put Claus on ignore, and write to the rest of us.Actually, it does. It must be faultlessly logically consistent.
JustGeoff said:This response seems to be based on an assumption that being an idealist philosophically prevents you from being materialistic when you are doing science. I don't think it does. I think that materialism and idealism are both required for a full understanding of the situation, but that in fact neither of them consititute the whole truth. I do not believe that Schroedinger believed in a literally "real" and permanently existing past. At least, he directly contradicts this when writing about philosophy. The particles don't have to be "virtually smeared out". The problem is we are using the wrong language to try to express what is going on. We are trying to use a solely physical theory to explain something which is deeply involved in philosophical questions about the nature of reality, and the result is a semantic mess. "particles" are part of a scientific model which is great at describing some aspects of the behaviour of our REAL reality. And you cannot have an :"unreal reality", no matter how much lifegazer tries to tell us you can. I think the realism/anti-realism question is silly. This IS reality. Even if it only exists when observed, it is no less REAL. I would still have to get up and go to work tomorrow, if I still had a job.![]()
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Originally posted by JustGeoff
Which may explain why people like you don't like him. Which makes it in turn highly likely that his views would meet serious opposition, regardless of whether they are accurate, for the very same reason I am encountering serious opposition here.
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Please show the evidence in support of your claim that "I don't like him".
You can be any sort of "ist" you want, it doesn't bother me. But please stop telling me that *I* am an "ist" of your choosing, or what I like or dislike, or what I believe about any given "ism". You nothing about what I do or don't believe, like or dislike, know or do not know, you are only aware of certain arguments I have advanced on this forum. You do not have the data or the experience to extrapolate your claims from the information at hand.
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Originally posted by JustGeoff
Macro-scopic QM effects might just be lots of microcopic QM effects.
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You are digging yourself into a deeper hole than you realise here. That statement is absurd. But in order to explain WHY it's absurd I would have to teach you the whole basic physics underlying QM (and quite a bit of ordinary physics too) which I have neither the time nor inclination to do.
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Originally posted by JustGeoff
I don't see why that is so. You cannot get away with claiming you already know the outcome of the current debate about reverse causality. Since my claim only requires reverse causality to not be impossible, the fact that I don't have your understanding of QM is not actually that significant.
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I never claimed I did know the outcome.
You are constantly moving the goalposts. Reverse causality at the QM level is one thing. You may even be right, the probability that you are is not necessarily extreme. But it DOES become extreme (extremely improbable) when you try to apply it at the macroscopic level. I don't care what the PHILOSOPHY of any given scientist is, neither should ANY scientist.
What matters is RESULTS. Proofs, experiments, results.
Not philosophical fantasies.
Ah, so it's "reverse-causality" but not as we know it, Jim!
So basically "reverse-casuality" is not any independent, objective, definable thing, it's something nebulous that simply changes definition whenever required to suit your claim?
Pragmatist said:If you don't believe the past or future exist at all you can't meaningfully talk about "causality", either forward OR reverse. I just love how you can say, "the only thing which actually exists is the present moment" and then in the same sentence refer to "altering the past". It doesn't EXIST, remember?
I'm not going to play "ism" mind games.
Geoff I am VERY tired of you telling me what I do or don't believe. I did NOT accuse Bohm of pseudoscience. You have NO basis to claim that I would. Please give up the pretend omniscience. Eddington WAS a pseudoscientist, he tried to construct atomic theories on the basis of numerology. Now, are you seriously going to try telling me that numerology is a legitimate scientific method? The only thing you are succeeding in doing is convincing me that you know little to nothing about the people you claim to know so well.
I never said anything about brains as observers, you are constantly embellishing what I say with your own ideas. But at least we agree on something, I don't believe "brains" can collapse wavefunctions.
You asked me about MY observer. You didn't stipulate that MY observer had to be a clone of yours!![]()
That's a VERY bold statement. Please explain how you can possibly KNOW that you "understand ontology and metaphysics" better than I do?
The fact that I hold the opinion that it is a waste of time to debate metaphysics tells you NOTHING about my knowledge of the subject.
However, I would absolutely agree. You need to stop confusing your philosophical speculations with the scientific discipline of QM, they are NOT the same at all.
I'm not going there because it's pointless to do so. And before you jump to the conclusion that means I am ignorant of the "observer", it doesn't. Perhaps, just PERHAPS I may know so much about it, that I know that it's pointless to talk about it. In fact I suggest you go read the Abhidharma and then you tell ME who the "observer" is!![]()
No, I don't believe "a brain", CAN/DOES/IS CAPABLE OF/WILL/DID/WOULD etc., collapse a wavefunction. Clear enough?![]()
You're a philosophy expert who is not familiar with General Semantics? Look it up, it would take me too long to explain here.
Ah! Interesting. Perhaps YOU need to examine YOUR assumptions at this point.
The ONLY way you could follow Schrodinger's line of reasoning is if you shared his knowledge of physics and QM.
Pragmatist said:No, you misunderstood me, I actually AGREE with you. In fact you are making my very point. It seems to me that to some extent you have concentrated on Schrodinger's more metaphysical world view, and so was Ian who seemed to be surprised at my saying that Schrodinger was a materialist.
I was trying to point out that he was BOTH, which is why I have repeatedly suggested that everyone should look at the WHOLE of his work, not just concentrate on one part of it.
His "metaphysical" views seem unusual placed side by side with his scientific ones....
, but there isn't really much conflict - he was aware that as a scientist he was constrained to material facts whereas in philosophy he wasn't. The important thing is that (as far as I am aware) he didn't confuse the two - as Bohm and others did.
And before you jump to the conclusion that means I am ignorant of the "observer", it doesn't. Perhaps, just PERHAPS I may know so much about it, that I know that it's pointless to talk about it. In fact I suggest you go read the Abhidharma and then you tell ME who the "observer" is!