Wave/particle duality in art and the world as a general pattern

In summary, scientists and nonscientists have not considered the idea that there might not be a "wave-particle duality", that it was simply due to our classical perception of things. This can be explored more from a working scientist's perspective.
  • #1
bdavlin
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As a professional novelist, I see wave particle duality in all things including arts. For instance a book written in the first person (I) is the particle viewpoint just as the 3rd person represents one bifurcation of the wave function viewpoint. I see wave particle duality everywhere. Take sexual reproduction. The female's sex organ is a particle viewpoint (one egg) as the sperm is the wave function (a mass of sperm). I wonder if scientists and nonscientists have spent time seeing wave particle duality in all things?
 
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  • #2
Have you ever considered the idea that there might NOT be a "wave-particle duality", that it was simply due to our classical perception of things we thought can only be described differently?

See an entry in the FAQ in the General Physics forum to see why, in quantum mechanics, there is no such thing as a "wave-particle duality".

So then, with that knowledge in mind, doesn't it make your original premise (wave-particle duality) as either being moot, or no longer has any connection with physics.

Zz.
 
  • #3
bdavlin said:
As a professional novelist, I see wave particle duality in all things including arts. For instance a book written in the first person (I) is the particle viewpoint just as the 3rd person represents one bifurcation of the wave function viewpoint. I see wave particle duality everywhere. Take sexual reproduction. The female's sex organ is a particle viewpoint (one egg) as the sperm is the wave function (a mass of sperm). I wonder if scientists and nonscientists have spent time seeing wave particle duality in all things?

If you are talking about general principles, then you really mean complementarity rather than duality - the breaking of the symmetry of possibility into two alternatives that are asymmetric and thus are different as possible, yet still completing each other.

And this breaking is usually across scale, so one becomes the local (the figure or event) and the other becomes the global (the ground or context). So for example, a particle is the notion of a localised and discrete entity, a field is the notion of a continuous and global context.

Male/female in fact does not fit well into this scheme. The sexes are usually more similar than they are different. Though you can contrast the single ova/many sperm in that the ova is a "context" in carrying across all the maternal cellular machinery, such as mitochondria, while the winning sperm is a "local event", just the DNA arriving. Or instead, the cloud of sperm as the global context, the ova as the local entity. (So you can see why I say that sexual reproduction is not actually a great example.)

However your first person/third person does have a clearer complementary structure. There is the local point of view complemented by the global one, that is the god's eye view of a third person narrator. You could call the distinction internal vs external, subjective vs objective, etc.

If you want to explore this more - from a working scientist's perspective - then Scott Kelso could be your guy. He has modeled complementarity in brain dynamics and now strives to show how it pervades all fields, including QM of course.

http://www.thecomplementarynature.com/
 

Related to Wave/particle duality in art and the world as a general pattern

1. What is wave/particle duality?

Wave/particle duality is a concept in quantum physics that describes the behavior of particles as both waves and particles. This means that particles, such as electrons and photons, can exhibit both wave-like properties, such as diffraction and interference, and particle-like properties, such as momentum and position.

2. How does wave/particle duality apply to art?

In the world of art, wave/particle duality can be seen as a metaphor for the duality of perception and reality. Just as particles can be both waves and particles, art can be both a representation of reality and an interpretation of it. This duality allows for a deeper understanding and appreciation of the art form.

3. What is the significance of wave/particle duality in the world?

Wave/particle duality is significant because it challenges our understanding of the fundamental nature of reality. It suggests that everything, even the smallest particles, can exist as both a wave and a particle, blurring the lines between what we perceive as solid and what we perceive as energy.

4. How is wave/particle duality related to the concept of duality in general?

Wave/particle duality is a specific example of the larger concept of duality, which is present in many aspects of our world. Duality refers to the coexistence of seemingly opposite or contradictory elements, and wave/particle duality is just one example of this phenomenon.

5. How does wave/particle duality impact our understanding of the world?

Wave/particle duality challenges traditional notions of cause and effect and the idea that everything can be fully explained and understood. It forces us to question the limitations of our perception and encourages us to think beyond the boundaries of classical physics. Ultimately, it expands our understanding of the world and our place in it.

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