This is a foolish, but related question. It is, is there a means, in princple, 
to somehow data mine the minkowski light cone? Conceptually, its photons 
interacting with baryons of one sort or another, so ought now the photon 
patterns of interactions with the old Bohr model of particles?  Its a question 
that I ponder every once in a while.

Sent from AOL Mobile Mail


-----Original Message-----
From: Jesse Mazer <laserma...@gmail.com>
To: everything-list <everything-list@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Mon, Apr 18, 2016 08:23 PM
Subject: Re: Non-locality and MWI



<div id="AOLMsgPart_2_3cfb4c30-ea4c-41f0-a359-157da375318a">
<div class="aolReplacedBody"><div dir="ltr">
<div class="aolmail_gmail_extra">
<div class="aolmail_gmail_quote">On Mon, Apr 18, 2016 at 3:45 AM, Bruce Kellett 
<span dir="ltr"><<a target="_blank" 
href="mailto:bhkell...@optusnet.com.au";>bhkell...@optusnet.com.au</a>></span> 
wrote:
<blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">
  
    
  
  
<span>
    On 18/04/2016 5:00 pm, Jesse Mazer wrote:

    <blockquote>
      <div dir="ltr">On Mon, Apr 18, 2016 at 1:37 AM, Bruce Kellett <span 
dir="ltr"><<a target="_blank" 
href="mailto:bhkell...@optusnet.com.au";>bhkell...@optusnet.com.au</a>></span>
        wrote:

        <div class="aolmail_gmail_extra">
          <div class="aolmail_gmail_quote">
            <blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">
              <div><span> On
                  18/04/2016 2:53 pm, Jesse Mazer wrote:

                  <blockquote>
                    <div dir="ltr">On Sun, Apr 17, 2016 at 9:19 PM,
                      Bruce Kellett <span dir="ltr"><<a target="_blank" 
href="mailto:bhkell...@optusnet.com.au";></a><a target="_blank" 
href="mailto:bhkell...@optusnet.com.au";>bhkell...@optusnet.com.au</a>></span> 
wrote:

                      <div class="aolmail_gmail_extra">
                        <blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" 
style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">
                          <div><span>On
                              18/04/2016 10:11 am, Jesse Mazer wrote:

                              <blockquote>
                                <div dir="ltr">
                                  <div class="aolmail_gmail_extra">
                                    <div class="aolmail_gmail_quote">On Sun, Apr
                                      17, 2016 at 7:34 PM, Bruce
                                      Kellett <span dir="ltr"><<a 
target="_blank" href="mailto:bhkell...@optusnet.com.au";></a><a target="_blank" 
href="mailto:bhkell...@optusnet.com.au";>bhkell...@optusnet.com.au</a>></span> 
wrote:

                                      <blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" 
style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">

                                        The future light cones of the
                                        observers will overlap at a time
                                        determined by their initial
                                        separation, regardless of
                                        whether they send signals to
                                        each other or not.

                                      </blockquote>
                                      <div>

                                      
                                      
Of course, I never meant to
                                        suggest otherwise. Imagining a
                                        central observer who receives
                                        messages about each experiment
                                        was just conceptually simpler
                                        than imagining an arbitrary
                                        system that is affected in some
                                        unspecified way by each
                                        experimenter's results along
                                        with every other part of that
                                        system's past light cone. But
                                        you certainly don't *need* to
                                        use that particular example.
                                    </div>
                                  </div>
                                </div>
                              </blockquote>
                              

                            </span>The issue is to find a local
                            explanation of the correlations: appealing
                            to some arbitrary system that is affected in
                            some unspecified way. But my example shows
                            that no exchange of information after the
                            separate worlds of the two experimenters
                            have fully decohered can ever explain the
                            quantum correlations.</div>
                        </blockquote>
                        


                        
                        
Why do you think it shows that? Does
                          "explain" mean something more than giving a
                          mathematical model that generates the correct
                          correlations, or is that sufficient?
                      </div>
                    </div>
                  </blockquote>
                  

                </span> Have you not understood my argument? The
                specified experiment results in four possible
                combinations of results: |+>|+'>, |+>|-'>,
                |->|+'>, and |->|-'>. It is relatively easy
                to show, either by looking at special cases, or by
                consideration of a repeated sequence of such
                experiments, that the probabilities are different for
                each of the four sets of results. The differences in
                probability depend only on the relative orientations of
                the measuring magnets. Conveying this angle information
                after the experiment has been completed, and each of the
                measurements has totally decohered, cannot explain these
                correlations.

                

                What is required is an account of how these correlations
                can arise <i>before</i> A and B speak to each other,
                because once they have their results in hand, it may be
                weeks before they actually communicate. Rubin's argument
                (following from Deutsch) does not achieve this.</div>
            </blockquote>
            


            
            


            
            
But as I said, you can achieve it if there is no fact
              of the matter about *both* results except in the overlap
              region of the future light cone of both measurements,
              where a single localized system may be causally influenced
              by both measurements (see below for more on what I mean by
              this if you're unclear).

            
            


            
            
 
            <blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">
              
<span>

                  

                  <blockquote>
                    <div dir="ltr">
                      <div class="aolmail_gmail_extra">
                        <blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" 
style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">
                          <div><span>
                              <blockquote>
                                <div dir="ltr">
                                  <div class="aolmail_gmail_extra">
                                    <div class="aolmail_gmail_quote">
                                      <blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" 
style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">This

                                        so-called "matching up" is pure
                                        fantasy. Who does this matching?
                                        If the central umpire is to do
                                        the matching, he has to have the
                                        power to eliminate cases that
                                        disagree with the quantum
                                        prediction. Who has that power?

                                      </blockquote>
                                      <div>

                                      
                                      


                                      
                                      
The laws of physics would do
                                        the matching in some
                                        well-defined mathematical way.
                                    </div>
                                  </div>
                                </div>
                              </blockquote>
                              

                            </span>I agree that the laws of physics will
                            'prevent' the formation of any worlds in
                            which the laws of physics are violated. That
                            is not the issue. The issue is: how do the
                            laws of physics act in order to achieve
                            this. Do they act locally or non-locally? If
                            they act locally, then you are required to
                            provided the local mechanism whereby they so
                            act. You are not doing this at the moment.</div>
                        </blockquote>
                        


                        
                        
Similar to my question above, what do you
                          mean by "mechanism" ? Do you mean something
                          more than simply "mathematical rule that gives
                          you the set of possible outcomes (with
                          associated probabilities or at least
                          probability amplitudes) at each local region
                          of spacetime, given only the set of possible
                          outcomes at regions in the past light cone"?
                      </div>
                    </div>
                  </blockquote>
                  

                </span> The mathematical rule that gives the differing
                probabilities for each outcome depending on the relative
                angle of the magnets is just quantum mechanics. But that
                is intrinsically non-local</div>
            </blockquote>
            


            
            
I specified that I was talking about a local
              mathematical rule--I said the rule would give out the
              outcomes at one location in spacetime "given only the set
              of possible outcomes at regions in the past light cone".
              Did you miss that part, or do you disagree that if I
              mathematically determine the state of some region of
              spacetime using *only* information about the states of
              regions in the past light cone, that is by definition a
              local theory?
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </blockquote>
    
</span>
    The local mathematical rule in this case, say for observer A, is
    that measurement on his own local particle with give either |+>
    or |->, with equal probability. It does not matter how many
    copies you generate, the statistics remain the same. I am not sure
    whether your multiple copies refer to independent repeats of the
    experiment, or simply multiple copies of the observer with the
    result he actually obtained. The set of outcomes on the past light
    cone for this observer is irrelevant for the single measurement that
    we are considering. Taking such copies can be local, but the utility
    remains to be demonstrated.</div></blockquote>


Sorry if I was unclear, I thought we were on the same page about the notion of 
"copies". The copies in my toy model are supposed to represent the idea in the 
many-worlds that there are multiple equally-real versions of a single system at 
a single location at a single time, including human experimenters, and that in 
any quantum experiment some versions will record one result and others will 
record a different one. So the copies represent different parallel versions of 
a simulated observer, and just as in the MWI, some copies see one result and 
other copies see a different result for any *single* experiment (and each copy 
retains a memory, so different copies remember different sequences of past 
results as well). And as in the MWI, these copies would be unaware of one 
another--just imagine several simulations of the same experimenter at the same 
time running in parallel, with different variations on what results the 
simulation feeds to them.

A common topic of discussion on everything-list is the subject of "first-person 
indeterminacy", which would be expected to result when the pattern of a given 
physical brain is duplicated (I haven't been following a lot of recent threads 
so I don't know if you've already weighed in on this topic before). You could 
imagine an actual atom-for-atom duplicate of a biological person, but to avoid 
objections based on the uncertainty principle and no-cloning theorem, let's 
instead suppose the person in question is that of a "mind upload"--a very 
realistic simulation of a human brain (at the level of synapses or lower) 
running on a computer, which most on this list would assume would be just as 
conscious as a biological brain. If the computer is a deterministic classical 
one, then if the simulated brain is in a simulated body in a simulated 
environment which is closed off from outside input and that also evolves 
deterministically, then if a copy is made of the program with the same starting 
conditions and the copies run in parallel on two different computers, the 
behavior (and presumably inner experiences) of the upload should be the same. 
But say that after the two programs have been running in parallel for a while 
there is a plan to produce a difference, with a screen inside the simulation 
flashing blue in one simulation, yellow in the other simulation. When that 
happens, the behavior and experiences of the two copies of the uploaded brain 
should diverge somewhat (and probably continue to diverge even more over time, 
since sensitive dependence on initial conditions--the 'butterfly effect'--very 
likely applies to brain dynamics). If the upload knows in advance that the 
experiment will work this way, then before the screen flashes a color, it would 
make sense for him to reason as if it's a probabilistic event, with a 50% 
chance of the screen showing blue and a 50% chance of it showing yellow. On the 
other hand, if he knows that 9 copies of the program will be shown slightly 
different (but distinguishable) shades of blue but only one will be shown a 
yellow screen, it makes sense for him to reason as if there is a 9:1 
probability he will see a blue screen, given that after the experiment is 
complete there will be 9 variants of him that remember a blue screen and only 1 
that remembers a yellow screen. If he has to bet something of value to him on 
the outcome, he will assume 50/50 odds of seeing blue in the first type of 
experiment and 90/10 odds in the second type of experiment.

According to the many-worlds interpretation we similarly have a huge number of 
parallel copies diverging from any given initial state of our memories, and so 
a many-worlds advocate will naturally interpret the apparently probabilistic 
nature of quantum physics in the same sort of way, as a kind of first-person 
indeterminacy that does not conflict with the perfectly deterministic evolution 
of the universal wavefunction (similarly in my above example of first-person 
indeterminacy, the master program that assigns different colors to the screens 
in different parallel simulations of the upload and his environment can also be 
entirely deterministic). See <a target="_blank" 
href="http://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2014/07/24/why-probability-in-quantum-mechanics-is-given-by-the-wave-function-squared/";>http://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2014/07/24/why-probability-in-quantum-mechanics-is-given-by-the-wave-function-squared/</a>
 for a nice discussion of a result on how in the many-worlds interpretation, 
assuming a "principle of indifference" about which branch you're on can be used 
to derive correct probabilities that match those given by the Born rule.

So the copies in the toy model are just simulating this aspect of the 
many-worlds interpretation. Again, to help make the locality more apparent, 
assume we have several physically distinct computers, each of which is *only* 
simulating copies of one particular observer at a fixed location in space, and 
the computers aren't allowed to communicate with each other any faster than 
should be permitted by the locality assumption. This could be made even more 
concrete by putting the different computers at spatial separations that match 
the separations the experimenters are supposed to have in the simulated 
universe--if two experimenters, Alice and Bob, are supposed to be 20 
light-seconds apart, then we have a computer simulating copies of Alice that's 
actually 20 light-seconds apart from a computer simulating copies of Bob, and 
the computers can exchange information via light signals.

If Alice is supposed to measure her entangled particle at a particular time, 
the computer has all the copies of Alice make that measurement at the same 
time, but some copies get one result and some copies get a different result (as 
with the blue screen/yellow screen example). Likewise with Bob. And the 
computer simulating Alice has no information about what detector setting Bob 
used, likewise the computer simulating Alice has no information about what 
detector setting Alice used--the computers simulating Alice has to assign the 
number of copies that see each possible result without any foreknowledge of 
what happened with Bob, and vice versa. If Bob is scheduled to transmit his 
result to Alice at a particular time, then the computer simulating Bob actually 
sends a package of messages from the different copies of Bob, this message 
traveling to the computer simulating Alice at the speed of light. When the 
computer simulating Alice receives the package of messages, it has to match 
messages from copies of Bob to copies of Alice in a one-to-one way, for example 
however many copies of Bob transmitted the message "I used detector setting #2 
and got result +", the same number of copies of Alice must receive that message.

At the end of this process, each copy of Alice will both have the result of her 
own measurement, and a message from Bob that tells of the result he got on his 
measurement. My claim is that given this setup, it's possible to design the 
rules of the program in a way that ensures that if you select a copy of Alice 
*at random*, the probability she'll have learned of a given pair of measurement 
results will match the probabilities predicted by quantum mechanics (recall my 
earlier argument that if an observer knows he or she is one of many copies 
whose experiences will diverge, the subjective probability he or she should 
assign to experiencing a particular outcome should be the same as the 
probability that a randomly-selected copy from the whole set will experience 
that outcome, for example if 9 copies of me will experience a blue screen and 
one will experience a yellow, I should reason as if there is a 90% chance I 
will experience a blue screen). This will work despite the fact that the 
computers doing the simulation of each experimenter are ordinary classical ones 
with no *actual* entangled particles being used, and despite the fact that the 
quantum experiment being simulated is one whose statistics would violate Bell 
inequalities, and despite the fact that locality is enforced by the actual 
separation between the two computers. The reason this doesn't actually violate 
Bell's theorem (which says no local realistic model can violate Bell 
inequalities) is that there is a loophole in the theorem: the proof of the 
theorem assumes that each measurement yields a single unique result, so if you 
drop this assumption the theorem no longer applies.

Anyway, do you disagree that the above is doable--that purely classical 
computers simulating copies of different observers, with the computers having 
an arbitrarily large spatial separation, can give these observers subjective 
probabilities identical to those in the quantum experiment?

 <blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">
<span>

    

    <blockquote>
      <div dir="ltr">
        <div class="aolmail_gmail_extra">
          <div class="aolmail_gmail_quote">
            <div> You are claiming to
              have a local account. But I have not yet seen it.
              Published attempts fail for the reasons given.

            
            


            
            
Can you actually follow the detailed math of Rubin's
              argument in a step-by-step way, and identify the first
              step that's an error? Or are you just saying that your
              conceptual argument is sufficient to show that any such
              attempt is impossible, regardless of the details? If
              you're making an impossible-in-principle argument, I think
              a simple toy model like the one I described is sufficient
              to show your argument must be wrong. 

            
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </blockquote>
    
</span>
    The conceptual argument is sufficient to show that Rubin must fail.
    Your toy model makes no impact on my argument.</div></blockquote>


But do you think the conceptual argument is sufficient to show that my *local* 
toy model must fail to duplicate the statistics seen in well? If not, what 
specific differentiating feature would you point to that implies the conceptual 
argument rules out duplicating quantum statistics locally in Rubin's model, but 
does *not* rule it out in my toy model?
<blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">
<span>

    

    <blockquote>
      <div dir="ltr">
        <div class="aolmail_gmail_extra">
          <div class="aolmail_gmail_quote">
            <div>Do you dispute that it would be possible to have a
              purely local and algorithmic copy-spawning rule with this
              property of reproducing the statistics of the real-world
              experiment, even knowing the real-world experiment would
              violate Bell inequalities? Or would you acknowledge this
              could be done but say it's irrelevant to whatever argument
              makes you confident Rubin's paper fails to do something
              analogous but with more generality? Or do you think that
              even if my approach succeeds at doing what I describe
              above and Rubin's might succeed in an analogous way, any
              local mathematical rule that deals solely with "copies" of
              systems at each location in space, without assigning
              copies at different locations to any common "world", is a
              failure as a local "mechanism" or "explanation"?
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </blockquote>
    
</span>
    Even if your local copy model succeeds in doing what you claim, it
    cannot reproduce the quantum correlations.
</div></blockquote>

But what I claim is that it *does* reproduce the correct quantum statistics for 
a randomly-selected copy. Do you disagree with this?

 <blockquote class="aolmail_gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 
0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">

    

    Let me reduce this to simple steps:

    

    1) MWI is an interpretation of QM only. I.e., it reproduces all the
    results of QM without adding any additional structure or dynamics.

    2) The QM state describing an entangled singlet pair does not refer
    to, or depend on, the separation between the particles.

    3) The quantum calculation of the joint probabilities depends on the
    relative orientation between the separate measurements on the
    separated particles.

    4) This quantum calculation is the same for any physical separation,
    since the singlet state itself does not depend on the separation.

    5) The quantum calculation is, therefore, intrinsically non-local
    because it does not depend on the separation, which can be
    arbitrarily large.

    6) Since MWI does not add anything to standard QM, and standard QM
    gives a non-local account of the probabilities we are considering,
    any MWI account must also be intrinsically non-local.

    

    You appear to be disagreeing with step 5 here -- by relying on a
    non-standard notion of locality.<span><font color="#888888"></font></span>
</blockquote>


What do you mean "non-standard notion of locality"? Do you think the standard 
notion means anything more than that the state of given region of spacetime can 
only be causally influenced by events in its past light cone? Nothing in the 
notion of locality rules out the possibility that the "state of a given region 
of spacetime" can include multiple parallel versions of a person who have no 
awareness of one another.

Jesse
 </div>
</div></div>

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