"no free will" simplest explanation for spooky action?

In summary: There is no one right answer to this question. It depends on your definition of "simple." If "simple" means that "there's no free will" is a plausible explanation for "spooky action at a distance," then yes, "there's no free will" is the simplest explanation. On the other hand, if "simple" means that "there's no free will" is an adequate explanation for all of the phenomena that it is claimed to explain, then no, "there's no free will" is not the simplest explanation.
  • #1
DirkMan
21
0
Isnt "there's no free will" the simplest explanation for "spooky action at a distance" ?

Bell himself said it:

"There is a way to escape the inference of superluminal speeds and spooky action at a distance. But it involves absolute determinism in the universe, the complete absence of free[/PLAIN] will"

I mean why bother with extra dimensions, parallel universes, all kinds of complicated explanations, when "there's no free will" sounds so simple.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
DirkMan said:
I mean why bother with extra dimensions, parallel universes, all kinds of complicated explanations, when "there's no free will" sounds so simple.

That's not the simplest explanation, and in fact is no explanation at all. Why would entangled state statistics be a consequence of free will?

And as far as a simple explanation goes: just chalk it up to the existence of a deity that likes to play with us.

Superdeterminism is not a theory, and it is not really an interpretation. There is no paper, for example, that explains how entangled state statistics could appear from measurement of pairs of particles and is due to a prior state of the system. All that is out there is non-scientific speculation.
 
  • Like
Likes bhobba
  • #4
Which is it? 14% or a third?
 
  • #5
Jilang said:
Which is it? 14% or a third?
Both. 14% to get a violation, 1/3 to get a maximal violation.
 
  • #6
DirkMan said:
I mean why bother with extra dimensions, parallel universes, all kinds of complicated explanations, when "there's no free will" sounds so simple.
To make this argument work we have to extend it a bit beyond just free will for us conscious entities choosing our detector settings - the mechanical random number generators used to choose the detector settings in most experiments must also have an underlying deterministic behavior. But yes, once you make that more general "no free will" assumption, you can explain Bell-type experiments while keeping both locality and realism and that has great intuitive appeal.

But is is really simpler? Do our Bell-type experiment with the source of entangled particles in orbit around alpha centauri four light-years away, one of the detectors on Earth and the other floating in space four light-years on the far side of source. Now you have to assume a causal process that determines the characteristics of the particle pair when it is created, and also determines the output of the random number generators years later and trillions of miles away. To get a sense of just how bizarre that is... You're basically saying that if the local weather conditions on alpha centauri are such that the particle pair is created in state A, then ten years later on Earth this particular radioactive atom will decay in a particular microsecond, but if the particle pair had been created in state B the atom would decayed one microsecond sooner or later. I'm not finding this any easier to believe than any of the other "explanations" floating around.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes bhobba
  • #7
DirkMan said:
Isnt "there's no free will" the simplest explanation for "spooky action at a distance" ?

Bell himself said it:

"There is a way to escape the inference of superluminal speeds and spooky action at a distance. But it involves absolute determinism in the universe, the complete absence of free[/PLAIN] will"

I mean why bother with extra dimensions, parallel universes, all kinds of complicated explanations, when "there's no free will" sounds so simple.

Yes, if in the EPR experiment, Alice and Bob are predestined to pick the settings for their detectors, then it is possible to guarantee the QM predictions without nonlocal effects. However, that way out is enormously implausible, in my opinion. Alice can base her decision on absolutely anything--the discovery of gravity waves, the outcome of an election, the score of a baseball game. If Bob's particle and detector have to take into account what detector setting Alice was predestined to use, that might require simulating potentially the whole rest of the universe. So even without the philosophical qualms about giving up free will, it seems to me like a very implausible way out.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • Like
Likes entropy1
  • #8
DirkMan said:
Isnt "there's no free will" the simplest explanation for "spooky action at a distance" ?
"No free will" in the meaning one would need if one would use it to explain BI violations would be the end of science. Science depends on doing experiments, and on the assumption that we are not forced by some magic to do experiments in some special way.
 
  • #9
No free will, or no real randomness? I've always viewed the probability of the Born Rule as some form randomization imposed by the observation process and it so clearly isn't. If Alice prepares Bob's particles by first measuring a particle and sending the unmeasured one onto Bob she will know (given Bob's filter is aligned with hers) with certainty Bob's results prior to measurement. Now, I refuse to believe that the fundamental nature of the Born probability changes with the alignment of either detector. We also all agree that there is no measurement or data reduction that Bob could do which would show Alice's state of awareness of his apparent random results.
 
  • Like
Likes entropy1
  • #10
Paul Colby said:
No free will, or no real randomness? I've always viewed the probability of the Born Rule as some form randomization imposed by the observation process and it so clearly isn't. If Alice prepares Bob's particles by first measuring a particle and sending the unmeasured one onto Bob she will know (given Bob's filter is aligned with hers) with certainty Bob's results prior to measurement. Now, I refuse to believe that the fundamental nature of the Born probability changes with the alignment of either detector. We also all agree that there is no measurement or data reduction that Bob could do which would show Alice's state of awareness of his apparent random results.

"No real randomness" means determinism, and determinism is not enough to reproduce the statistical results of the EPR experiment. You need superdeterminism, which means that not only are the outcomes a deterministic function of the particle state + detector setting, but that the detector setting itself must be predictable. In a sense, if things are deterministic, then that means that Alice's settings are predetermined, but that doesn't imply they are predictable. Her settings might depend on absolutely anything else in the universe, and so for the settings to be predictable, you would need complete knowledge about the entire universe.
 
  • #11
stevendaryl said:
You need superdeterminism, which means that not only are the outcomes a deterministic function of the particle state + detector setting, but that the detector setting itself must be predictable.
Well, for one detector setting Alice has complete knowledge of Bob's results and Bob has no way to tell Alice has this information or not. Predetermination is clearly possible in some cases and Bob can't tell. Clearly one cannot predetermine all measurements but one example is enough for me to conclude that there is no interaction randomizing a previous unknown value. I'm still very much in the QM is fundamental camp however this is an interesting aspect of measurement I feel comfortable with. Quantum ensembles certainly have weird superposition properties that just aren't classical.
 
  • #12
DirkMan said:
I mean why bother with extra dimensions, parallel universes, all kinds of complicated explanations, when "there's no free will" sounds so simple.

Superdeterminism is fine, but it doesn't seem to be useful. Usually, we would like to use our scientific theories to make predictions. However, superdeterminism seems to require a degree of knowledge of the initial conditions that we cannot have. In classical physics, we do take a god-like view of nature. However, we don't have to be truly god-like, just a lower level god with blurry vision. Superdeterminism seems to require much sharper vision than we can ever have.

However, as you can see I have only made hand-wavy arguments, so there is room for an advocate of superdeterminism to come up with a good concrete proposal.
 
  • #13
Not sure if this is appropriate... but I tend to think of the future as a probability, with the current time simply being the one that had the highest probability of occurring. It is clear (to me) from the experiments that our actions do in-fact determine the future. The only question is... how much of it? All or just the bit we can measure?

I only know of one other explanation that makes any sense... and it is that the universe is actually a simulation. This perfectly explains the existence of magic... *cough cough* err quantum physics :smile:
 
  • #15
DirkMan said:
Isnt "there's no free will" the simplest explanation for "spooky action at a distance" ?

Bell himself said it:

"There is a way to escape the inference of superluminal speeds and spooky action at a distance. But it involves absolute determinism in the universe, the complete absence of free[/PLAIN] will"

I mean why bother with extra dimensions, parallel universes, all kinds of complicated explanations, when "there's no free will" sounds so simple.
It's not only absolute determinism. It's superdeterminism. In other words, not only that future is completely determined by initial conditions, but initial conditions must be fine tuned, so that nature looks as if there are laws which really aren't there. This is like saying that apple does not fall due to gravity, but that it is a pure coincidence that the apple falls down whenever it happens that your hands let it free. Why bother with Newtonian gravity, general relativity, or even quantum gravity, when pure coincidence looks so simple?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #16
stevendaryl said:
So even without the philosophical qualms about giving up free will, it seems to me like a very implausible way out.

I would be more interested in whether such a deterministic model fits our observations of reality than how it "seems" at first glance. Things happen regardless of whether we like them or find them plausible. I don't see any philosophical qualms about "giving up free will", especially if it turns out to be a purely fabricated notion. If anything, it could be viewed as a negative to pretend it is there when it isn't.

Ilja said:
"No free will" in the meaning one would need if one would use it to explain BI violations would be the end of science. Science depends on doing experiments, and on the assumption that we are not forced by some magic to do experiments in some special way.

"No free will = end of science" doesn't follow. An update to our understanding of reality does not necessarily change our behavior. Calling an assumption of determinism "magic" is roughly as credible as calling an assumption of free will "magic", absent convincing evidence to believe one over the other. Whether the universe has free will or the concept is an illusion created because our minds can't model complexity at nearly the pace needed make consistently perfect predictions, we'd behave the same way as far as we know (IE we don't have complete knowledge of the entire universe at every instant to reliably utilize determinism and can't process thought to handle it, if that's how things work).

Our motivation to do experiments and interpret them does not change between either model.

atyy said:
However, as you can see I have only made hand-wavy arguments, so there is room for an advocate of superdeterminism to come up with a good concrete proposal.

Superdeterminism exists or it doesn't, regardless of whether it's within our ability to make useful predictions, to the best of my understanding. However, If we can't falsify it or make future predictions then it's true that wouldn't be too helpful in practice. However, that would be true if superdeterminism doesn't exist too. We need something we can test and use.

Demystifier said:
It's not only absolute determinism. It's superdeterminism. In other words, not only that future is completely determined by initial conditions, but initial conditions must be fine tuned, so that nature looks as if there are laws which really aren't there.

Why is that necessarily true, if the "laws" are consistent with the initial conditions? I am not an expert in these fields and joined this forum out of interest alone, so I'm looking at this from a simple consistency/conceptual framework. However, it seems to be that superdeterminism, should that be how reality works, is being given assumptions that don't necessarily follow.
 
  • #17
TheMeInTeam said:
I would be more interested in whether such a deterministic model fits our observations of reality than how it "seems" at first glance. Things happen regardless of whether we like them or find them plausible. I don't see any philosophical qualms about "giving up free will", especially if it turns out to be a purely fabricated notion. If anything, it could be viewed as a negative to pretend it is there when it isn't.

Well, for discussions of interpretations of QM, the phrase "free will" doesn't mean anything too philosophical. It's just that in an EPR experiment, Alice can decide at the last minute what setting to choose. That doesn't have to be a "really" free choice, because she might use a pseudo-random number generator, or she might decide "If I see a shooting star in the next 30 seconds, I'll choose this setting", or she could decide "If I hear thunder, I'll choose this other setting." None of those strategies for choosing the setting is really random, but they are in practice unpredictable, unless you have perfect information about the current state of the universe. For superdeterminism to be a possible way out of violations of Bell's inequalities, it would be comparable to arranging shards of glass to rearrange into an unbroken glass bottle.
 
  • #18
TheMeInTeam said:
I would be more interested in whether such a deterministic model fits our observations of reality than how it "seems" at first glance.

Unfortunately in QM many many models, including superdeterminism, fits the facts. That's one of its big issues.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #19
TheMeInTeam said:
I would be more interested in whether such a deterministic model fits our observations of reality
The deterministic model matches observation just fine. That's something of an unhelpful tautology though, because the deterministic model has no testable candidate theory of what the underlying mechanism might be, only the hypothesis that there is a mechanism that deterministically produces results that match observation.

This is a general issue with all quantum mechanical interpretations: We've already rejected all the ones that don't match observation (the most recent to go being the EPR hypothesis that there is an underlying local hidden variable theory, killed off in the decades after 1965). Thus, all the survivors match the observational results and there are no experiments that could tell us which one is right. Instead, we're left with personal aesthetic choices: The "simplest" in the thread title, the words "plausible" and "implausible" used by you and other posters in this thread... Those are basically statements of preference, not empirical fact.
 
  • Like
Likes bhobba
  • #20
stevendaryl said:
Well, for discussions of interpretations of QM, the phrase "free will" doesn't mean anything too philosophical. It's just that in an EPR experiment, Alice can decide at the last minute what setting to choose. That doesn't have to be a "really" free choice, because she might use a pseudo-random number generator, or she might decide "If I see a shooting star in the next 30 seconds, I'll choose this setting", or she could decide "If I hear thunder, I'll choose this other setting." None of those strategies for choosing the setting is really random, but they are in practice unpredictable, unless you have perfect information about the current state of the universe.

Superdeterminism as a model for reality does *not* assume we can make predictions merely by its existence. That is what I'm objecting to. For the purposes of making preditions, you're going to have a heck of a time predicting what Alice chooses to do last minute regardless of whether superdeterminism or randomness is in play. As such, it's not a useful objection to the conceptual possibility; as an objection it does not distinguish between alternative models.

stevendaryl said:
it would be comparable to arranging shards of glass to rearrange into an unbroken glass bottle.

We're not arranging things regardless in this thought experiment, and the universe/reality carries on.

bhobba said:
Unfortunately in QM many many models, including superdeterminism, fits the facts. That's one of its big issues.

I'm aware, but what confuses me is that some interpretations are favored over others despite the lack of good reason to pick one based on evidence. At the very least, I would like to see objections that are not commonly applicable to each interpretation :p.
 
  • #21
TheMeInTeam said:
At the very least, I would like to see objections that are not commonly applicable to each interpretation :p.
There's something not to like about every interpretation, and these have been extensively discussed in many previous threads here. For example:
People object to the extravagant multiplication of universes in MWI.
Collapse interpretations are awkward with space-like separated measurements of entangled particles.
Some people find the minimal statistical interpretation to be so minimal as to completely evade the question.
Bohmian interpretations lose their intuitive power when applied to complex configurations.
This thread has given many people an opportunity to (re)state why they don't like superdeterminism.
...
You will notice that all of these objections are based on personal preference - not surprising when you consider that the starting point is "something not to like".

We routinely close interpretation threads when they get to the point where no one is saying anything that hasn't said before, and this thread is there. As with all such thread closures, you can send me a PM if you believe that there is something more that can be usefully said on the topic.
 
  • Like
Likes bhobba

Related to "no free will" simplest explanation for spooky action?

1. What is "no free will" and how does it relate to spooky action?

"No free will" refers to the belief that all actions and decisions are predetermined and not based on personal choice. Spooky action, also known as quantum entanglement, is a phenomenon where two particles become connected in a way that their states are dependent on each other, regardless of the distance between them. Some scientists argue that this phenomenon challenges the concept of free will, as it suggests that our actions may be influenced by factors beyond our control.

2. How does quantum mechanics support the idea of "no free will"?

Quantum mechanics, which is the branch of physics that studies the behavior of matter and energy at a very small scale, suggests that particles can exist in multiple states at once and that they can become entangled with each other. This means that the outcome of a particle's state is determined by factors outside of our control, challenging the concept of free will.

3. Can "no free will" and spooky action be scientifically proven?

At this time, there is no scientific evidence that definitively proves the existence of free will or disproves it. The concept of free will is still highly debated and may never be fully understood or proven. Similarly, while quantum entanglement has been observed and studied, it is still not fully understood and its implications on free will are still a topic of debate among scientists.

4. How does the idea of "no free will" impact our understanding of morality and responsibility?

The concept of free will is closely tied to our understanding of morality and responsibility. If our actions are predetermined and we have no control over them, it may challenge the idea of being responsible for our choices and the consequences that follow. However, even if free will does not exist, our understanding of morality and responsibility may still be important for maintaining a functional and just society.

5. Is there a way to reconcile the idea of "no free will" and the concept of personal agency?

While it may seem contradictory, some scientists have proposed that the concept of "no free will" does not necessarily negate the idea of personal agency. They argue that while our actions may be influenced by external factors, we still have the ability to make choices and decisions based on our own thoughts and motivations. This idea suggests that while we may not have complete free will, we still have a sense of personal agency and control over our own lives.

Similar threads

Replies
1
Views
2K
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
22
Views
32K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
11
Views
2K
Replies
17
Views
4K
Replies
6
Views
1K
  • Beyond the Standard Models
Replies
31
Views
573
Replies
38
Views
21K
  • Beyond the Standard Models
Replies
11
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
3
Replies
75
Views
3K
Replies
14
Views
3K
Back
Top