On Tuesday, July 31, 2018 at 1:33:21 AM UTC, Bruce wrote:
>
> From: Jason Resch <[email protected] <javascript:>>
>
> On Mon, Jul 30, 2018 at 7:36 PM Bruce Kellett <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> From: Jason Resch <[email protected] <javascript:>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Jul 30, 2018 at 6:12 PM Bruce Kellett <[email protected] 
>> <javascript:>> wrote:
>>
>>> From: Jason Resch <[email protected] <javascript:>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jul 30, 2018 at 12:29 AM, Bruce Kellett <[email protected] 
>>> <javascript:>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> From: Jason Resch <[email protected] <javascript:>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, Jul 30, 2018 at 12:13 AM, Brent Meeker <[email protected] 
>>>> <javascript:>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> ?? Quantum computers cannot calculate anything more than classical 
>>>>> computers.  There are some algorithms that allow a QC to calculate 
>>>>> something faster; but the domain and range is the same.
>>>>>
>>>>> So absent that reason does it follow that the wave function is merely 
>>>>> a convenient (and very accurate) tool?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Tool for what?  Predicting probabilities of finally measured values?
>>>>
>>>> What then can we say about the intermediate values and the computation 
>>>> itself?  Does it exist and happen, or does the final result merely 
>>>> materialize magically like the live or dead cat?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Does the spot on the screen behind two slits materialize magically? Or 
>>>> arise as a consequence of the interference in the one world?
>>>>
>>>> In many-worlds, all possible screen spots occur in different worlds. 
>>>> But the separation into distinct worlds happens only on decoherence at the 
>>>> screen -- the interference all happens in the original single world.
>>>>
>>>
>>> What is the photon in each world interfering with?
>>>
>>>
>>> It's a wave, so it's interfering with itself. Just like water or sound 
>>> waves.
>>>
>>
>> You are saying "a photon is a wave" as if that is an explanation and to 
>> avoid the main point.  If a photon is a wave, and it is interfering with 
>> other waves, then in other words, it's interfering with other photons.
>>
>>
>> No, it is interfering with itself. Don't be mislead by the water/sound 
>> wave analogy.
>>
>>
> You can use "itself" only if this "it" can be in multiple locations and 
> heading in different directions.
>
>
*Yes, the wave emanates from, say, two different locations, from each slit, 
where we are modeling the photon as a wave which passes through both slits, 
interferes with itself, and via some unknown processes makes a single 
impact on the screen. AG *

>
> That is a property of waves. But you will only ever observe a single 
> photon from this wave.....
>
> On that we agree.  But where did those other photons come from? How did 
>> they get to be in different positions going in different directions? 
>>
>>
>> They aren't.
>>
>
> How do do you explain the experiment with beam splitters and recombining 
> light at a half silvered mirror to interfere and only be reflected one way?
>
>
> Photons have both wave-like and particle-like properties. That is quantum 
> physics.
>
>
> Why do these "waves" (photons) behave in all the same ways as photons, 
> they reflect off mirrors, pass through strained glass (only if the glass is 
> the same color as the photon), are blocked by opaque objects, travel at c, 
> etc?
>
>
> Ah, the mysteries of quantum physics. Photons do not have a purely 
> classical description. Get used to it.
>
>>
>> It's many shadow partners in other worlds.  World is a confusing term 
>> unless we define it. 
>>
>>
>> I agree. Frequently, many-worlders follow Deutsch and have a 
>> schizophrenic attitude to "worlds" -- they are either any component of any 
>> possible superposition, or the semi-classical endpoint of the process of 
>> decoherence. In the first case, "worlds", as components of a superposition, 
>> can interfere. In the second case, worlds are effectively orthogonal and 
>> cannot interfere. Equivocating between these meanings causes endless 
>> confusion -- and idiot physics.
>>
>> I always use the term "world" in the second sense, so worlds are 
>> orthogonal and cannot interfere.
>>
>> We might also say the system of the photon is in many states, while the 
>> rest of the system (us, the screen) remain in one state, until we interact 
>> with the many-state photon system.  So in that sense, you could argue the 
>> screen and us are in one world until the decoherence.  But the system of 
>> the photons can't properly be described as any singe photon system.
>>
>>
>> Because the photon is a wave. The attempt to eliminate waves or fields 
>> from physics in favour of a purely particle ontology failed. Feynman was 
>> most disappointed by this, but if you think you can do better than 
>> Feynman.........
>>
>> "Newton thought that light was made up of particles--he called them 
>> "corpuscles"--and he was right. We know that light is made of particles 
>> because we can take a very sensitive instrument that makes clicks when 
>> light shines on it, and if the light gets dimmer, the clicks remain just as 
>> loud--there are just fewer of them. [...] I want to emphasize that light 
>> comes in this form--particles. It is very important to know that light 
>> behaves like particles, especially for those of you who have to gone to 
>> school, where you were probably told something about light behaving like 
>> waves. I'm telling you the way it *does* behave--like particles. You 
>> might say that it's just the photomultiplier that detects light as 
>> particles, but no, every instrument that has been designed to be sensitive 
>> enough to detect weak light has always ended up discovering the same thing: 
>> light is made of particles." -- Richard Feynman
>>
>>
>> Feynman was wrong when he wrote this. Even he eventually saw that this 
>> was wrong -- it couldn't be made to work.
>>
>>
> Do you have a source I could read on this?
>
>
> The failure of the Wheeler-Feynman absorber theory was always a 
> disappointment to Feynman. I can't recall an exact source, but I think more 
> recent books on the history and interpretation of QT probably cover the 
> development of Feynman's thought.
>
> The main argument against Feynman's "all is particles" idea is the 
> existence of Hawking and Unruh radiation. These are effects of quantum 
> fields in curved space-time, and there is no particle explanation. See 
> Wald: "Quantum Field Theory in Curved Spacetime", or his "General 
> Relativity". Or the book by Birrell and Davies.
>
> Bruce
>

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