The Probability Distribution and 'Elements of Reality'

In summary: In a minimal interpretation I supposed it makes sense to assign "reality" to the actual evidence; ie. the data...In summary, the probability distribution corresponds to elements of reality for each run of an experiment. The probability distribution tells you what the probability is to find the system in a given region of space.
  • #36
Ad 1) The randomness is an "element of reality". The EPR criterion is experimentally disproven by all the Bell tests demonstrating the violation of the Bell inequality.

Ad 2) QT precisely describes how Nature behaves randomly. Of course the very observable is measured the apparatus used to measure it is constructed for. The outcome of a measurement is unique, if this apparatus is properly constructed. The observables don't have determined values if the system is not prepared in a state, in which they have determined values. Thus the outcome of a measurement is usually random, and QT predicts the probabilities and only the probabilities for the outcome of measurements. A system interacts with the measurement device as described by the Standard Model of particle physics. At least we don't know of any other interactions yet. It's likely that our knowledge is incomplete, i.e., it's pretty sure that there should be more particles than yet discovered and described by the Standard Model.

QT is incomplete with respect to the gravitational interaction.
 
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  • #37
vanhees71 said:
The EPR criterion is experimentally disproven by all the Bell tests demonstrating the violation of the Bell inequality.
Bell tests do not disprove the general criterion, that 'every element of the physical reality must have a counterpart in the physical theory'.

What they do disprove is the 'local hidden variable' criterion which EPR chose to focus on. But, as EPR stated, that was just one possible way of determining an 'element of reality'. It did not exhaust all possible ways.

vanhees71 said:
Ad 1) The randomness is an "element of reality".
The randomness of the system may well be an 'element of reality'. But, it is not the only element of reality of the system. If the detection event is indeed 'element of reality'* of the system and if it only becomes 'an element of reality' at the moment of observation, then it doesn't correspond to anything in the SI, since it always occurs with certainty. In this case, the SI would be incomplete according to the general EPR criterion and also by your own criterion of accounting for all observable facts.

vanhees71 said:
Ad 2) QT precisely describes how Nature behaves randomly. Of course the very observable is measured the apparatus used to measure it is constructed for. The outcome of a measurement is unique, if this apparatus is properly constructed. The observables don't have determined values if the system is not prepared in a state, in which they have determined values. Thus the outcome of a measurement is usually random, and QT predicts the probabilities and only the probabilities for the outcome of measurements. A system interacts with the measurement device as described by the Standard Model of particle physics. At least we don't know of any other interactions yet. It's likely that our knowledge is incomplete, i.e., it's pretty sure that there should be more particles than yet discovered and described by the Standard Model.

QT is incomplete with respect to the gravitational interaction.
QT doesn't describe precisely how the system behaves randomly, it simply predicts that it will behave randomly. The question is, how does the system randomly appear in a single unique position? Some interpretations say that the system is in multiple locations simultaneously and spontaneously collapses into a single well defined positon. What does the SI say?

When we say that randomness is 'an element of reality' what we mean is that the system randomly appears in a single well-defined position. This idea has implications that we can explore.

Again, we can pose the question as to what this 'randomness' tells us about the system. Does it tell us:
1) In truth, there is only one possible outcome but we calculate a probability due to a lack of information.
2) In truth, every position with a non-zero probability, has a genuine possibility of being measured.

Ruling out #1, we are left with #2. We can explore the implications of this.

From there we can pose the question:
A) Contrasting with scenario #1 above, what does it mean, or how can it be the case, that there are several
genuinely possible outcomes?
B) How does the system go from several genuinely possible outcomes to a single observed outcome?
 
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  • #38
Lynch101 said:
You mentioned in the 'Assumptions of Bell's Theorem' thread that you agree with the 'weak' claim that the Statistical Interpretation is incomplete. In what sense would you say that it is incomplete?
You phrased that claim specifically in terms of the EPR definition of "complete". I was agreeing that, in terms of that definition, the statistical interpretation is incomplete, because the statistical interpretation does not, by the EPR definition, include any "elements of reality" at all, and the EPR definition (at least as I understand it) assumes that there are at least some elements of reality that any complete theory must include (although the EPR definition itself makes no specific assertions about what those elements of reality are).
 
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  • #39
Lynch101 said:
Simply saying that nature is behaving in a random way is not necessarily the end of the road in terms of what we can infer about nature. We want to know:
- how is nature behaving randomly?
- What is the process whereby several, genuinely possible outcomes is reduced to a single observable?
- In what sense can there be several, genuinely possible outcomes (as opposed to the alternative, where
only one outcome is possible)?
- If the system is not located in the spatial region adjacent to the measurement device, how does it interact
with it?

The answers to these and other questions have implications for how nature behaves.
I agree some of these questions are reasonable to ask, but I think different interpretations provide context where these questions are interpreted differently, some questions are perhaps denied. For people that have different abstractions, it may be hard to even agree what the questions means, or what counts as an "answer", or have explanatory value.

/Fredrik
 
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  • #40
PeterDonis said:
You phrased that claim specifically in terms of the EPR definition of "complete". I was agreeing that, in terms of that definition, the statistical interpretation is incomplete, because the statistical interpretation does not, by the EPR definition, include any "elements of reality" at all,
Would you say then, that the statistical interpretation does give a complete description of the quantum system?

PeterDonis said:
the statistical interpretation does not, by the EPR definition, include any "elements of reality" at all, and the EPR definition (at least as I understand it) assumes that there are at least some elements of reality that any complete theory must include (although the EPR definition itself makes no specific assertions about what those elements of reality are).
Not to state the obvious, but EPR are talking about describing the quantum system so, 'every element of the physical reality' simply refers to every piece of information about the quantum system, observable and/or unobservable.

So, if the statistical definition does not include any 'elements of reality' at all, then it means it doesn't contain any information about the quantum system at all, which would make it incomplete by any definition.
 
  • #41
Fra said:
I agree some of these questions are reasonable to ask, but I think different interpretations provide context where these questions are interpreted differently, some questions are perhaps denied. For people that have different abstractions, it may be hard to even agree what the questions means, or what counts as an "answer", or have explanatory value.

/Fredrik
I would agree with you on this, different interpretations provide context for the questions and, in some cases, the questions may even be denied. Even the denial of the questions, however, have implications about how nature is.

The questions themselves represent pretty basic ideas about nature and to deny them would be to state that such concepts do not apply at the quantum level. This then would necessitate further clarification or description to explain how the quantum world gives rise to observations at the classical level, where such concepts do apply.
 
  • #42
Lynch101 said:
Would you say then, that the statistical interpretation does give a complete description of the quantum system?
I don't think that question is a physics question to begin with. I think it's a philosophy question which does not have a well-defined answer.

Lynch101 said:
EPR are talking about describing the quantum system so, 'every element of the physical reality' simply refers to every piece of information about the quantum system, observable and/or unobservable.
The EPR definition gives a very precise definition of "elements of reality", and this is not it.

Lynch101 said:
if the statistical definition does not include any 'elements of reality' at all, then it means it doesn't contain any information about the quantum system at all
This is false, even according to the EPR definition. See above.
 
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  • #43
PeterDonis said:
I don't think that question is a physics question to begin with. I think it's a philosophy question which does not have a well-defined answer.
Is it not the purview of physics to [attempt to] give a complete description of the quantum system? Your answer would seem to suggest that only philosophy can then [attempt to] determine the completeness of any given interpretation.

PeterDonis said:
The EPR definition gives a very precise definition of "elements of reality", and this is not it.This is false, even according to the EPR definition. See above.
Are you referring to the 'predict without disturbing criterion'?
 
  • #44
Lynch101 said:
Is it not the purview of physics to [attempt to] give a complete description of the quantum system?
No. It's the purview of physics to construct models that make accurate predictions. Physics cannot prejudge what such models will require.
 
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  • #45
Lynch101 said:
Are you referring to the 'predict without disturbing criterion'?
Yes.
 
  • #46
PeterDonis said:
No. It's the purview of physics to construct models that make accurate predictions. Physics cannot prejudge what such models will require.
EPR seem to be calling for a complete description or complete model of the quantum system.

If the raison d'etre of a model was simply to make accurate predictions then an infinite number of models could be created, with lots of superfluous and unobservable attachments which, nonetheless, make accurate predictions. There certainly seems to be an inclination in the field of physics towards finding the 'correct' model.

If making accurate predictions were the sole purview of physics, there would be no need for QM interpretations, would there?
 
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  • #47
PeterDonis said:
Yes.
As per EPR, that represents just one way of identifying an 'element of reality' and is 'far from exhausting all possible ways'.
 
  • #48
Lynch101 said:
EPR seem to be calling for a complete description or complete model of the quantum system.
That does not mean that physics must require that. It just means it was their opinion that physics should require that. Their opinion might be wrong. We will only find out by continuing the process of constructing models that make predictions and comparing those predictions with experiments. And it is that process that will tell us what is "required" for a theory of physics, not a priori statements or people's opinions.
 
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  • #49
Lynch101 said:
If making accurate predictions were the sole purview of physics, there would be no need for QM interpretations, would there?
There isn't any "need" for QM interpretations as a matter of physics; they are not physical theories, they are stories people like to tell about a physical theory. As a matter of physics, a QM interpretation would only be "needed" if it turned out to lead to a different theory, one that made different predictions from standard QM, and had those predictions confirmed by experiments.
 
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  • #50
vanhees71 said:
Of course, a probability distribution doesn't select which outcome you'll get when performing the random experiment. It just tells you the probability for that outcome. QT can be considered complete if you accept that Nature behaves objectively random as described by it. If you don't accept this, you consider QT as incomplete. Of course, you can neither prove that QT is complete nor that it is incomplete. One can only say that with the hitherto observed facts there is no need for an alternative theory, because QT describes all the observed facts very well.
What I am doing is trying to unpack the various senses of complete.

E.g. Yes QM suggests that nature behaves objectively randomly. What occurs follows probabilisticially from what was prepared. But it is still the case that reality exhibits only one history. This history is "ontologically privileged", but a quantum theory does not mark out any history as privileged or distinct. QM cannot therefore report a complete ontological account.

This is a very precise sense of incomplete that is not normally what physicists talk about when they use the word, but it is what a lot of lay people seem to be asking about.
 
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  • #51
PeterDonis said:
That does not mean that physics must require that. It just means it was their opinion that physics should require that. Their opinion might be wrong. We will only find out by continuing the process of constructing models that make predictions and comparing those predictions with experiments. And it is that process that will tell us what is "required" for a theory of physics, not a priori statements or people's opinions.

PeterDonis said:
There isn't any "need" for QM interpretations as a matter of physics; they are not physical theories, they are stories people like to tell about a physical theory. As a matter of physics, a QM interpretation would only be "needed" if it turned out to lead to a different theory, one that made different predictions from standard QM, and had those predictions confirmed by experiments.
There certainly seems to be a rich history of physicists seeking interpretations for the mathematical models they develop. It seems to go beyond simply shutting up and calculating. Making predictions is certainly the means by which the accuracy of the models is verified, where accuracy is the correspondence of the model to the universe we live in.

Would you say that interpreting the mathematical models is then the purview of philosophy and not physics?
 
  • #52
Morbert said:
What I am doing is trying to unpack the various senses of complete.

E.g. Yes QM suggests that nature behaves objectively randomly. What occurs follows probabilisticially from what was prepared. But it is still the case that reality exhibits only one history. This history is "ontologically privileged", but a quantum theory does not mark out any history as privileged or distinct. QM cannot therefore report a complete ontological account.

This is a very precise sense of incomplete that is not normally what physicists talk about when they use the word, but it is what a lot of lay people seem to be asking about.
Is it not the sense of completeness that EPR were seeking i.e. a complete description of physical reality?
 
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  • #53
Lynch101 said:
There certainly seems to be a rich history of physicists seeking interpretations for the mathematical models they develop.
For QM, yes. But not for other theories of physics. There is not a rich history of physicists seeking interpretations for Newtonian mechanics or relativity.

Lynch101 said:
Would you say that interpreting the mathematical models is then the purview of philosophy and not physics?
In the sense you mean "interpreting", yes, since it has nothing to do with the predictions the model makes. Models are not reality. Perhaps you have heard the saying, "All models are false but some are useful." I suggest that you spend some time reflecting on that.
 
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  • #54
PeterDonis said:
We will only find out by continuing the process of constructing models that make predictions and comparing those predictions with experiments. And it is that process that will tell us what is "required" for a theory of physics, not a priori statements or people's opinions.
This reminds my of the thinking around Poppers falsification, where one tries to put most emphasis on corroboration and falsification, and not so much on the creative process of finding new hypothesis in a way that does not flood us with more hypothesis that our corroboration capacity can handle. Paradoxally this create part is essential to the progress in science, but it's also the most murky and fuzzy part, which can be annoying, and one can be tempted to deny it's importance due to it's subjective nature.

Although subjective, and beloning to the murky waters, the "interpretation" is to me at least part of the deeper understanding of things, that is important to the process of extrapolating or extending it in a rational way, rather than trying random modifications in a hypothesis space which would gurantee a random walker to get lost. In this sense one might sense that the choice of interpretation reflects the way we think we "understand" things. But of course only the future will tell if it's right or wrong.

/Fredrik
 
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  • #55
Fra said:
the "interpretation" is to me at least part of the deeper understanding of things, that is important to the process of extrapolating or extending it in a rational way
That is what advocates of various QM interpretations are basically claiming: that their preferred interpretation will lead to a deeper understanding by being extrapolated or extended to a different theory that can be experimentally tested. But so far that hasn't happened.
 
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  • #56
Fra said:
the "interpretation" is to me at least part of the deeper understanding of things, that is important to the process of extrapolating or extending it in a rational way
Other than QM (for which, as I said in my previous post just now, no such extension has yet worked out), I am not aware of any physical theory that works that was arrived at by starting with an interpretation of a prior theory and then extrapolating or extending it. For example, relativity was not discovered by starting with some interpretation of Newtonian physics and then extrapolating or extending it. It was discovered by trying to construct a theory of mechanics that had the same transformation properties (Lorentz transformations) as Maxwell electrodynamics.
 
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  • #57
Lynch101 said:
Am I interpreting this correctly as saying, QT 'does not does not completely describe the reality of [the] system' but most physicists believe that a more complete description is not possible?

Lynch101 said:
Is it not the sense of completeness that EPR were seeking i.e. a complete description of physical reality?

In the EPR discussion, they consider "every element of physical reality" as accounted for by a physical state that is not uniquely (and therefore not completely) characterised by a quantum wavefunction. A physicists can accept the probabilistic nature of QM, at odds with the singular nature of reality, but also reject the EPR argument by insisting that a wavefunction does uniquely characterise the physical state of a system.
 
  • #58
Lynch101 said:
Is it not the sense of completeness that EPR were seeking i.e. a complete description of physical reality?
For me EPR's description of physical reality is ruled out by all the very accurate Bell tests, including the most recent ones ruling out many if not all the loopholes. The difficulty seems to be still today that many philosophers (and also some physicists) seem not to accept what physics is telling us, i.e., that our all too classically formed intuition about how Nature behaves is flawed, and we have to adapt our intuitions to what quantum theory tells us about Nature's behavior. It's not the purpose of the natural sciences to confirm our prejudices but to learn how Nature "really" behaves, and obviously Nature's behavior is much closer to what's described by QT than by the (imho pretty vague) philosophical ideas by EPR. Particularly their conclusion about the predetermination of observables that are indetermined due to quantum mechanics is ruled out, at least for the class of local hidden-variable theories a la Bell.

The only example, which works as a theory is the Bohmian nonlocal reinterpretation of non-relativistic QT. The problem with this is that there's no satisfactory Bohmian reinterpretation of local relativistic QFT, which is the most comprehensive theory of matter yet found.
 
  • #59
PeterDonis said:
For QM, yes. But not for other theories of physics. There is not a rich history of physicists seeking interpretations for Newtonian mechanics or relativity.
With relativity we have the Lorentzian view based on absolute simultaneity and the Einsteinian based on relativity of simultaneity. From the Einsteinian view we have all manner of interpretations from the Block Universe, the growing block universe, the Relational Block Universe, Julian Barbour's 'Platonia', to the interpretation you've written about in your insight article.

PeterDonis said:
In the sense you mean "interpreting", yes, since it has nothing to do with the predictions the model makes. Models are not reality. Perhaps you have heard the saying, "All models are false but some are useful." I suggest that you spend some time reflecting on that.
Yes, it is impossible to create a model of reality that matches it exactly but the models we create can reveal consequences not always obvious from the mathematical formalism - precisely because the mathematical formalism can be interpreted in different ways.
 
  • #60
Was I interpreting your statement correctly when I interpreted it as saying, QT 'does not does not completely describe the reality of [the] system' but most physicists believe that a more complete description is not possible?

Morbert said:
In the EPR discussion, they consider "every element of physical reality" as accounted for by a physical state that is not uniquely (and therefore not completely) characterised by a quantum wavefunction. A physicists can accept the probabilistic nature of QM, at odds with the singular nature of reality, but also reject the EPR argument by insisting that a wavefunction does uniquely characterise the physical state of a system.
I try to make the distinction between the EPR argument and the overall aim as suggested by the title of the paper. The argument that they put forward in the paper does not, they say, exhaust all possible ways of regocognising an element of physical reality.

Ultimately, what they are calling for is a complete description of the system and their general criterion is that all elements of physical reality i.e. everything about the system should correspond to something in the mathematics. You have stated previously that the statistical (or 'anti-realist') interpretation says that the wave function does not correspond to physical reality.
 
  • #61
Well, in contradistinction to the QT case the various philosophical interpretations of spacetime models (SR, GR) don't play much of a role within the physics community. The only impact of philosophy on relativity concerning the history of physics is that Einstein explicitly did not get his Nobel prize for his work on relativity. It's one of the few if not the only example where the Nobel diploma explicitly emphasizes that a laureat got the Nobel prize not for one of his major achievements. The "culprit" here is the very influential philosopher Henri Bergson, who could not be convinced by the physicists among them particularly Langevin and also Einstein himself that the notion of time in the theories of relativity are valid.

The philosophical quibbles with the interpretations of QT however have triggered and still trigger a lot of work also in the physics community. While before Bell it was a career-killing step to question the Copenhagen doctrine with Bohr as the pope, and Bell cautioned young colleagues not to enter the field before having secured a tenured job. Fortunately this changed when his ideas, making the philosophical speculations a la EPR and others a scientifically well-defined hypothesis which was decidable by objective observations, and then starting with the first experiments by Clauser and particularly Aspect et al a whole new branch of physics started to be created, which today we call quantum information or the like. With the development of all kinds of sources of entangled quantum systems and after most of the "thought experiments" could be realized in high-precision experiments now for a few years it has reached such a maturity that it becomes a subject of engineering, opening an entire new branch of "quantum engineering" research and development. So here the philosophers had a good impact on science and technology although some philosophers as well as physicists still seem not to be satisfied with what I call a clear answer of the question whether QT describes reality completely.

For me the answer definitely is yes with the qualification that QT is not intrinsically complete as long as there is no satisfactory description of the gravitational interaction within QT or some more comprehensive new theory. That's, however, not a philosophical but a scientific problem, which I guess won't be solved before there's clear empirical evidence of "quantum effects" of gravity (gravitons?) to guide the theorists to maybe find one day the desired theory "beyond the Standard Model".
 
  • #62
vanhees71 said:
For me EPR's description of physical reality is ruled out by all the very accurate Bell tests, including the most recent ones ruling out many if not all the loopholes.
...
Particularly their conclusion about the predetermination of observables that are indetermined due to quantum mechanics is ruled out, at least for the class of local hidden-variable theories a la Bell.
We need to be careful not to throw the baby out with the bathwater here. While the primary focus of the paper is on the one particular argument put forward by EPR, it is situated in the context of a broader point. The broader point was that of the complete description of the system, for which they gave their more general criterion. EPR say that their argument does not exhaust all possible arguments. Theirs is just one possible way of 'recognising an element of reality'.

That one particular argument is ruled out by Bell tests, there can be no 'local hidden variables' without (what people refer to as) 'conspiratorial common causes'. There can be no single, pre-defined value for position. But that doesn't mean that there cannot be multiple values for position, or that there is no position/location whatsoever.

The invalidation of their single, inexhaustive argument does not allow us to conclude that the statistical interpretation is, therefore, a complete description of the system. It only allows us to conclude that there are no 'local hidden variables'.

Bell's theorem appears to leave us with 3/4 options of how to explain the observed correlations:
1) non-local hidden variables
2) superdeterminism
3) [strong] anti-realism
4) [Insert alternative here]

All of these represent [potentially] complete descriptions of the system. We might not be able to determine, by way of experiment, which of them is correct, but they are potentially complete. If we reject these options but fail to provide an alternative explanation, then we are leaving ourselves with an incomplete description.

vanhees71 said:
The difficulty seems to be still today that many philosophers (and also some physicists) seem not to accept what physics is telling us, i.e., that our all too classically formed intuition about how Nature behaves is flawed, and we have to adapt our intuitions to what quantum theory tells us about Nature's behavior. It's not the purpose of the natural sciences to confirm our prejudices but to learn how Nature "really" behaves, and obviously Nature's behavior is much closer to what's described by QT than by the (imho pretty vague) philosophical ideas by EPR.
I'm in full agreement that the physics doesn't need to conform to our intuitions and that we need to examine what the physics is telling us. That is precisely what I am trying to do.

Simply saying that QT doesn't conform to our intuitions isn't a complete answer nor, necessarily, is saying that the system behaves randomly. It is possible that we can draw further, necessary, conclusions about the system. We can do this by exploring what the physics is telling us and by following the consequences. By doing this we can identify precisely where nature diverges from our intuitions or more precisely, our current models of the universe. More importantly, for the purpose of completeness, we can try to establish how nature diverges from our current models.

For example, when we say the system passes through a carefully-prepared, inhomogenous magnetic field, this has certain implications according to our existing models. If the magnetic field occupies a finite region of space and the system passes through this finite region of space then, according to our existing model, we can narrow down the location of the system at some time during the experiment i.e. it must be located in the finite region of space occupied by the magnetic field.

If we deny that the system has a location somewhere in this finite region of space then we need an explanation as to why. Simply saying that nature doesn't need to conform to our intuitions is fine, but it is incomplete.

vanhees71 said:
The only example, which works as a theory is the Bohmian nonlocal reinterpretation of non-relativistic QT. The problem with this is that there's no satisfactory Bohmian reinterpretation of local relativistic QFT, which is the most comprehensive theory of matter yet found.
The relativity of simultaneity [potentially] has consequences for the statistical interpretation and the application of the probability distribution. But that would be the subject of a different discussion.
 
  • #63
PeterDonis said:
That is what advocates of various QM interpretations are basically claiming: that their preferred interpretation will lead to a deeper understanding by being extrapolated or extended to a different theory that can be experimentally tested. But so far that hasn't happened.
Fair enough.

But i think it's a hard problem, and it may take still more time. And I also wonder how many that really work hard enough on this, compare to other work? After all, it's not the best way for making a living. To be honest I had expected much more from myself in this regard even, but reality is that other stuff grabs most time. So I think the lack or process is also partially a research political question. Some of the dominating research programs in foundational QM, IMO avoids some of the harder questions, so no wonder progress is slow.

/Fredrik
 
  • #64
Lynch101 said:
Was I interpreting your statement correctly when I interpreted it as saying, QT 'does not does not completely describe the reality of [the] system' but most physicists believe that a more complete description is not possible?

These discussions can't be reduced to unqualified propositions. E.g. If I answered yes to your question above, then the proposition itself would be open to misinterpretation, especially if it was used as the starting point of some other argument. Instead we should say something like

"QM (with the usual interpretational caveats) does not completely describe the reality of the system in the sense that a quantum theory will report the likelihoods of possible events occurring, but will not single out the set of events that actually occur, and not in the sense that there is a physical state or thorough account of all elements of reality not uniquely characterised by the quantum state."

I try to make the distinction between the EPR argument and the overall aim as suggested by the title of the paper. The argument that they put forward in the paper does not, they say, exhaust all possible ways of regocognising an element of physical reality.

Ultimately, what they are calling for is a complete description of the system and their general criterion is that all elements of physical reality i.e. everything about the system should correspond to something in the mathematics. You have stated previously that the statistical (or 'anti-realist') interpretation says that the wave function does not correspond to physical reality.

I don't think we can easily divorce the aim from the argument. And ultimately we have to depart from simple terms like "elements of reality" into specifics.
 
  • #65
Lynch101 said:
I'm in full agreement that the physics doesn't need to conform to our intuitions and that we need to examine what the physics is telling us. That is precisely what I am trying to do.
The difficulty lies in identifying misleading intuitions (preconceptions). Before Einstein it was "self-evident" that there can be only one time throughout the universe that is the same for all observers. A similar preconception, in my opinion, is the idea that the world around us is composed of objects that are subject to definite "laws of motion".
Lynch101 said:
Bell's theorem appears to leave us with 3/4 options of how to explain the observed correlations:
1) non-local hidden variables
2) superdeterminism
3) [strong] anti-realism
4) [Insert alternative here]
Physics would certainly become more intuitive, if an explanation based on familiar notions could be found. But I think a search for such explanations is futile and we should be happy to have an excellent description of those correlations. You may dislike statistical theories (e.g. the kinetic theory of gases) as "incomplete", but I think their incompleteness is an advantage. We don't become overwhelmed with details. I don't dare to imagine a theory that could predict the decay time of a particular neutron.
 
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  • #66
Morbert said:
These discussions can't be reduced to unqualified propositions. E.g. If I answered yes to your question above, then the proposition itself would be open to misinterpretation, especially if it was used as the starting point of some other argument. Instead we should say something like

"QM (with the usual interpretational caveats) does not completely describe the reality of the system in the sense that a quantum theory will report the likelihoods of possible events occurring, but will not single out the set of events that actually occur, and not in the sense that there is a physical state or thorough account of all elements of reality not uniquely characterised by the quantum state."
I don't think we can easily divorce the aim from the argument. And ultimately we have to depart from simple terms like "elements of reality" into specifics.
But you can also argue, and that seems the most plausible alternative given the empirical facts, that QM completely describes the reality of the system, because the set of events that actually occurs is not predetermined but objectively random.
 
  • #67
vanhees71 said:
But you can also argue, and that seems the most plausible alternative given the empirical facts, that QM completely describes the reality of the system, because the set of events that actually occurs is not predetermined but objectively random.

You can, but without qualifying "complete" I think it will ultimately be set against us in some future conversation.

E.g. You tell Bob that "QM completely describes the reality of the system, because the set of events that actually occurs is not predetermined but objectively random.". Bob says great and prepares a Schroedinger's cat experiment as per usual. The cat, vial, box atmosphere etc is prepared in a state ψ. After t seconds, our quantum theory of the box tells us the probability that the cat is alive is 0.5. Since bob heard you use the word complete, and he imposes his understanding of the word, he decides the reality inside the box is that the cat is suspended in some state of neither dead nor alive, and will only exhibit the reality of a dead (or living cat) with a 50% likelihood once he opens the box.
 
  • #68
A physical theory is complete if it describes all known observations.

All that Bob can know about the poor cat is that it is with probability 1/2 alive and with probability 1/2 dead. There's not more to be known about the observables "dead" or "alive" before looking. That's the only "reality" there is.
 
  • #69
vanhees71 said:
A physical theory is complete if it describes all known observations.

All that Bob can know about the poor cat is that it is with probability 1/2 alive and with probability 1/2 dead. There's not more to be known about the observables "dead" or "alive" before looking. That's the only "reality" there is.

I agree that Bob's quantum theory of the box {ψ, H} uniquely characterises all he can know about it. But he (as I'm sure you agree) should still be free to suppose that the cat really is dead or alive, regardless of whether or not he can know it.
 
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  • #70
You can suppose a lot of unobserved things, but that has no meaning at all. You can suppose you've chosen the right numbers in Lotto, but it doesn't help you, if other numbers are drawn next Saturday.
 

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