Re: Plaga

2005-05-27 Thread "Hal Finney"
Paddy Leahy writes:
> As an exercise I've been trying to pinpoint exactly what is wrong with
> Plaga's paper  On careful reading, the paper is just littered with
> confusions and errors  Hence, if we saw what he predicted, we would
> actually *disprove* MWI QM, not confirm it as he thinks.

Thanks for looking at this.  It seemed clear to me that it could not work
but it is good to see a detailed analysis of where Plaga goes wrong.

Seems that his result would do more than disprove the MWI, it would
actually disprove QM in general.  As you have shown, he effectively has to
assume nonlinear state evolution (although he does not do so explicitly,
he claims to be working in orthodox QM).  Bruno noted that Steven Weinberg
has done work with possible nonlinear version of QM.  Some researchers
have found that his model would allow for faster-than-light signalling.
Probably communicating with the Everett branches would be possible
as well.

Hal Finney



Re: Plaga

2005-05-27 Thread Patrick Leahy


As an exercise I've been trying to pinpoint exactly what is wrong with 
Plaga's paper. For anyone who doubts that it *is* wrong, note that it 
proposed 10 years ago an experiment which he said was feasible with what 
was then state-of-the-art equipment. This technology has now massively 
advanced.  The experiment would guarantee a Nobel prize for anyone who 
performed it successfully. In that time the paper has been cited in the 
published literature only 3 times, and never by an experimental physicist. 
And this is not because the paper was unnoticed by the community at the 
time, e.g. it was publicised by John Baez, whose writings are widely read.


On careful reading, the paper is just littered with confusions and errors. 
I guess this explains why no-one bothered to publish a rebuttal; this 
falls in the class of "not even wrong".  Probably the root problem is a 
confusion about the true nature of decoherence. Decoherence is often 
presented using the maths of density matrices, so I better explain 
this briefly:


Density matrices allow you to handle the case when you don't know the 
exact quantum state. The procedure is to divide your description into a 
measurable "system" and a complex, not-measurable-in-detail "environment". 
One can then define the density matrix of the combined system, and "trace 
out" the uncertain state of the environment, giving a density matrix for 
the system alone in the absence of information about the environment. A 
test to see if the system has been decohered by its interaction with the 
environment is that the off-diagonal terms in the system-only density 
matrix go to zero. Plaga clearly accepts the usual position that 
irreversible branching in MWI occurs when decoherence is (FAPP) total.


If you follow this through in Plaga's example, you do indeed find that the 
density matrix for the states of his trapped ion, |A1> and |A2>, is 
diagonal, confirming the obvious that once a macroscopic measurement has 
taken place, we have total decoherence.  But what Plaga does in his Eq 8 
is to reverse the roles of system and environment (he actually does the 
algebra wrong but the numerical answer is unaffected). Because at this 
stage the ion knows nothing about the rest of the lab, he gets a density 
matrix *for the lab* with large off-diagonal terms, corresponding to a 
"pure" state:


 (|W1> + |W2>) / sqrt(2).

So far, so correct (after all, in MWI the state is *always* pure).

But he now concludes that decoherence has not yet occurred. *WRONG*. The 
condition "off-diagonal terms go to zero" is just a sufficient condition 
for decoherence. It is only necessary if the "system" itself is so simple 
that it could not decohere without the help of the environment. But Plaga 
is treating the complex, macroscopic lab as the "system" and that 
certainly can decohere without the help one more ion. The more basic 
definition is that decoherence has occured once the states are permanently 
orthogonal, so you cannot demonstrate quantum interference. Plaga 
correctly states that |W1> and |W2> *are* permanently orthogonal, but does 
not realise that this means that decoherence *is* complete, contrary to 
what he says.  Another way to put this is that the observer "Silvia" 
doesn't need the density matrix in Eq. (8) because she knows for sure 
already whether she detected the original photon or not, hence whether she 
is in branch |W1> or |W2>.


Given this, the rest of Plaga's argument is just irrelevant. But he should 
have noticed that his process blatantly violates the linearity of time 
evolution, which is one of the fundamental assumptions of MWI QM. This is 
manifest in his Eq. 6 which associates an excited ion with the |P2> term 
in which no excitation took place (if you start with a photon in state 
|P2>, when the photon is guaranteed not to be detected, the ion is never 
excited). Hence Eq 6 is not a linear superposition of the two possible 
histories. Hence, if we saw what he predicted, we would actually 
*disprove* MWI QM, not confirm it as he thinks.


Paddy Leahy

 ==
Dr J. P. Leahy, University of Manchester,
Jodrell Bank Observatory, School of Physics & Astronomy,
Macclesfield, Cheshire SK11 9DL, UK
Tel - +44 1477 572636, Fax - +44 1477 571618



Re: Plaga

2005-05-26 Thread rmiller

At 06:58 PM 5/24/2005, rmiller wrote:

In a recent post (5/24) I wrote. . .

I would suggest re Plaga or anyone else discussed here, it's not the time 
spent in a particular academic trench that makes the idea great, it's the 
quality of the insight.
As luck, coincidence or a wide specious present would have it, we have this 
story in Wired re Peter Lynds: 
<<http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.06/physics.html>>



R.Miller


*(and Elvis Costello was a computer programmer---the list goes on.)







Re: Plaga

2005-05-26 Thread aet.radal ssg
Ha, ha.

- Original Message - 
From: "Saibal Mitra" 
To: everything-list@eskimo.com 
Subject: Re: Plaga 
Date: Thu, 26 May 2005 18:50:01 +0200 

> 
> Bruno was quoting another Aet from a parallel world :) 
> 
> 
> 
> Quoting Eugen Leitl : 
> 
> > 
> > If you expect to be quoted correctly, stop posting HTML-only. 
> > 
> > On Thu, May 26, 2005 at 08:45:34AM -0500, aet.radal ssg wrote: 
> > > HEY! BRUNO - I, (aet) didn't say that. Someone else did. I was 
> > quoting them. If you're going to quote somebody, I suggest you get it 
> > right.

- Original Message - 
From: "Bruno Marchal" 
> > 
To: "aet.radal ssg" 
> > 
Subject: Re: Plaga 
Date: Wed, 25 May 2005 
> > 20:40:21 +0200 

> 
> 
> Le 25-mai-05, à 17:59, 
> > aet.radal ssg a écrit : 
> 
> > From the initial page from 
> > the included link to the archive: "I'm 
> > no physicist so I 
> > don't know for sure that these implications 
> > would 
> 
> > > follow, but I am very doubtful that interworld communication is 
> > consistent 
> > with the basics of quantum mechanics.  The 
> > fact that this paper has not 
> > been published in peer reviewed 
> > journals in 7 years indicates that it 
> > probably doesn't work." 
> > 
> 
> Ooh... you should not make inferences like that. I 
> > could give 
> you 10,000 reasons for not publishing. But I have not 
> > the time 
> because I have a deadline today! 
> 
> I red 
> > Plaga's paper. It is extremely interesting. It belongs to the 
> 
> > family of Weinberg's result. Some hoped that a slight 
> 
> > delinearisation of QM would "explain the collapse". Reasoning a-la 
> 
> > Weinberg Plaga shows that it is the contrary which happens. Not 
> 
> > only we keep the MW but they became more "real" in some sense. It 
> 
> > shows the MWI is stable for slight "variation of the SWE". this 
> 
> > confirms MWI in a deeper way. It shows quantum non linearity 
> 
> > contradicts thermodynamics! This is a powerful argument in favor of 
> > 
> both pure linear QM and MWI. 
> 
> (Good for me, it 
> > shows nature confirms the lobian machine's 
> inability to observe 
> > kestrels and starlings when they look enough 
> closely to 
> > themselves) 
> 
> Bruno 
> 
> 
> > http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/ 


> > > > -- > 
> > 
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> > > 

> > -- Eugen* Leitl leitl 
> > __ 
> > ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.leitl.org 
> > 8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A 7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE 
> > 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> _ 
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Re: Plaga

2005-05-26 Thread Saibal Mitra
Bruno was quoting another Aet from a parallel world :)



Quoting Eugen Leitl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> 
> If you expect to be quoted correctly, stop posting HTML-only.
> 
> On Thu, May 26, 2005 at 08:45:34AM -0500, aet.radal ssg wrote:
> > HEY! BRUNO - I, (aet) didn't say that. Someone else did. I was
> quoting them. If you're going to quote somebody, I suggest you get it
> right.- Original Message - From: "Bruno Marchal"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>To: "aet.radal ssg"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Subject: Re: Plaga Date: Wed, 25 May 2005
> 20:40:21 +0200 > > > Le 25-mai-05, à 17:59,
> aet.radal ssg a écrit : > > > From the initial page from
> the included link to the archive: "I'm > > no physicist so I
> don't know for sure that these implications > > would >
> > follow, but I am very doubtful that interworld communication is
> consistent > > with the basics of quantum mechanics.  The
> fact that this paper has not > > been published in peer reviewed
> journals in 7 years indicates that it > > probably doesn't work."
> > > Ooh... you should not make inferences like that. I
> could give > you 10,000 reasons for not publishing. But I have not
> the time > because I have a deadline today! > > I red
> Plaga's paper. It is extremely interesting. It belongs to the >
> family of Weinberg's result. Some hoped that a slight >
> delinearisation of QM would "explain the collapse". Reasoning a-la >
> Weinberg Plaga shows that it is the contrary which happens. Not >
> only we keep the MW but they became more "real" in some sense. It >
> shows the MWI is stable for slight "variation of the SWE". this >
> confirms MWI in a deeper way. It shows quantum non linearity >
> contradicts thermodynamics! This is a powerful argument in favor of
> > both pure linear QM and MWI. > > (Good for me, it
> shows nature confirms the lobian machine's > inability to observe
> kestrels and starlings when they look enough > closely to
> themselves) > > Bruno > >
> http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/ 
> > 
> > -- 
> > ___Sign-up
> for Ads Free at Mail.com
> >  href="http://mail01.mail.com/scripts/payment/adtracking.cgi?bannercode=adsfreejump01";
> target="_blank">http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup
> > 
> -- 
> Eugen* Leitl http://leitl.org";>leitl
> __
> ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820http://www.leitl.org
> 8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A  7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
> 




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Re: Plaga

2005-05-26 Thread Eugen Leitl

If you expect to be quoted correctly, stop posting HTML-only.

On Thu, May 26, 2005 at 08:45:34AM -0500, aet.radal ssg wrote:
> HEY! BRUNO - I, (aet) didn't say that. Someone else did. I was 
> quoting them. If you're going to quote somebody, I suggest you get it 
> right.- Original Message - From: "Bruno Marchal" <[EMAIL 
> PROTECTED]>To: "aet.radal ssg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Subject: Re: Plaga 
> Date: Wed, 25 May 2005 20:40:21 +0200 > > > Le 
> 25-mai-05, à 17:59, aet.radal ssg a écrit : > > > From the 
> initial page from the included link to the archive: "I'm > > no 
> physicist so I don't know for sure that these implications > > 
> would > > follow, but I am very doubtful that interworld 
> communication is consistent > > with the basics of quantum 
> mechanics.  The fact that this paper has not > > been 
> published in peer reviewed journals in 7 years indicates that it > 
> > probably doesn't work." > > Ooh... you should not make 
> inferences like that. I could give > you 10,000 reasons for not 
> publishing. But I have not the time > because I have a deadline today! 
> > > I red Plaga's paper. It is extremely interesting. It 
> belongs to the > family of Weinberg's result. Some hoped that a slight 
> > delinearisation of QM would "explain the collapse". Reasoning a-la 
> > Weinberg Plaga shows that it is the contrary which happens. Not 
> > only we keep the MW but they became more "real" in some sense. It 
> > shows the MWI is stable for slight "variation of the SWE". this 
> > confirms MWI in a deeper way. It shows quantum non linearity 
> > contradicts thermodynamics! This is a powerful argument in favor of 
> > both pure linear QM and MWI. > > (Good for me, it 
> shows nature confirms the lobian machine's > inability to observe 
> kestrels and starlings when they look enough > closely to 
> themselves) > > Bruno > > 
> http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/ 
> 
> -- 
> ___Sign-up for 
> Ads Free at Mail.com
>  href="http://mail01.mail.com/scripts/payment/adtracking.cgi?bannercode=adsfreejump01";
>  target="_blank">http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup
> 
-- 
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__
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Description: Digital signature


Re: Plaga

2005-05-26 Thread aet.radal ssg
- Original Message - From: "Jesse Mazer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], everything-list@eskimo.com Subject: Re: Plaga Date: Wed, 25 May 2005 14:37:54 -0400 > > aet.radal ssg wrote: > > > From the initial page from the included link to the archive: "I'm > > no physicist so I don't know for sure that >these implications > > would > > follow, but I am very doubtful that interworld communication is consistent > > with the basics of quantum mechanics.  The fact that this paper has not > > been published in peer reviewed journals in 7 years indicates that it > > probably doesn't work." > > > > Back when I wasn't long in the field of video production I was > > well aware of the insistance and belief of >TV engineers that a > > single tube industrial color video camera was not broadcast > > quality. Working in >cable, where they were used for cablecast, I > > had plenty of opportunity to look at picture quality, etc. and > > >came to the conclusion that it shouldn't be a problem. 2 years > > later I got the chance to prove it when a >local news station > > sent a crew out to cover something that I was shooting. In the > > end I gave them >the editied sequence I had shot (now down two > > generations), and they took it and edited it into their >story, > > which would have taken it down a third. Then they broadcasted it > > over the air. I taped it off-air and >the results were conclusive > > - I was right, all the nay-sayer engineers were wrong. A $40,000 > > Ikegami  >vs a $1,500 Panasonic and it was a tie except for one > > slight red bleed from a costume due to the >Saticon tube bias > > toward red in the camera I used, which could have been color > > corrected with a time >base corrector, but whoever dubbed the > > tape left the red level a little too hot. > > > > My point being that that was the first in a long line of "you > > can'ts" that I've faced which I eventually >proved, "you can". > > Thus I have a dim view of such positions when they aren't backed > > up with >experiments that prove so *conclusively*. As long as the > > possibility exists, I keep an open mind. >Besides, if unbriddled > > skepticism was right all the time, we wouldn't be using > > computers, flying, or >even have phones of any kind, just to name > > a few things. > > There is a fundamental difference between claims that we can never > do something because the engineering problems are too great, and > claims that we can never do something because the laws of physics > themselves say it's impossible. 
I'm going to take that as an indication that you don't understand the inherent implications of what I was talking about. It does have to do with "the laws of physics" because the engineers were that there was a specific physical reason as to why the right number of electrons weren't going to be able to be produced in order to create a broadcast quality picture. Physics deals with the behavior of electrons which is key to video technology and applications. When the engineers said that a type of camera wasn't broadcast quality they were saying that the laws of physics, which determine what EM signals do and how they behave when transmitted at various frequnecies, etc., wouldn't allow that transmitted signal from that one tube camera source to be received at the proper FCC level. To better understand how these ancient devices used to work you check out http://www.acmi.net.au/AIC/IMAGE_ORTHICON.html and http://members.chello.nl/h.dijkstra19/page4.html .
So, did I break the laws of physics? No. I just accomplished a work around because the engineers' model was too narrow. I didn't re-engineer the camera and not even the manufacturer claimed it was a broadcast quality device. I looked at the camera output and determined that the physical model that the engineers and yes, the entire freaking video camera and broadcast industry was using, was *wrong*. Their model of physics for the behavior of the signals produced by that camera was wrong. And I proved it. 
Likewise, I believe that the model of QM that a lot of people use is too narrow. There are physicists who won't even allow for MWI despite that others do. I allow for MWI that allows for contact because I believe that, like those engineers, those who insist that contact between worlds is impossible have a model that's too narrow and are missing something. 
>For example, I've heard people say > things like "I'm sure we'll eventually break the light-speed > barrier, after all, once people thought it was impossible that we&#x

Re: Plaga

2005-05-26 Thread aet.radal ssg
HEY! BRUNO - I, (aet) didn't say that. Someone else did. I was quoting them. If you're going to quote somebody, I suggest you get it right.- Original Message - From: "Bruno Marchal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>To: "aet.radal ssg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Subject: Re: Plaga Date: Wed, 25 May 2005 20:40:21 +0200 > > > Le 25-mai-05, à 17:59, aet.radal ssg a écrit : > > > From the initial page from the included link to the archive: "I'm > > no physicist so I don't know for sure that these implications > > would > > follow, but I am very doubtful that interworld communication is consistent > > with the basics of quantum mechanics.  The fact that this paper has not > > been published in peer reviewed journals in 7 years indicates that it > > probably doesn't work." > > Ooh... you should not make inferences like that. I could give > you 10,000 reasons for not publishing. But I have not the time > because I have a deadline today! > > I red Plaga's paper. It is extremely interesting. It belongs to the > family of Weinberg's result. Some hoped that a slight > delinearisation of QM would "explain the collapse". Reasoning a-la > Weinberg Plaga shows that it is the contrary which happens. Not > only we keep the MW but they became more "real" in some sense. It > shows the MWI is stable for slight "variation of the SWE". this > confirms MWI in a deeper way. It shows quantum non linearity > contradicts thermodynamics! This is a powerful argument in favor of > both pure linear QM and MWI. > > (Good for me, it shows nature confirms the lobian machine's > inability to observe kestrels and starlings when they look enough > closely to themselves) > > Bruno > > http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/ 

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RE: Plaga

2005-05-26 Thread aet.radal ssg
You're welcome, Lee.

- Original Message - 
From: "Lee Corbin" 
To: everything-list@eskimo.com 
Subject: RE: Plaga 
Date: Wed, 25 May 2005 22:04:19 -0700 

> 
> I could not find who suggested Plaga's paper recently, but 
> thanks to whoever it was. Whether Plaga is right or wrong, 
> his introductory remarks and general presentation are 
> simply superb. 
> 
> There is even the very noteworthy (or humorous, I can't decide) 
> sentence which reads "Independent of what one thinks about the 
> MWI a priori, this is also a very systematic way to make 
> experimental progress in the question of the interpretation 
> of QM, because in the MWI the predictions for any conceivable 
> experiment are free from philosophical subtleties...(!)" 
> 
> Lee 
> 
> P.S. Thanks also to Saibal: 
> 
> > Plaga's paper has been published: 
> 
> > "Proposal for an experimental test of the 
> > many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics 
> 
> http://xxx.lanl.gov/PS_cache/quant-ph/pdf/9510/9510007.pdf 
> 
> 
> Found.Phys. 27 (1997) 559 
> 
> arXiv: quant-ph/9510007 
> 
> > -Original Message----- 
> > From: "Hal Finney" [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> > Sent: Tuesday, May 24, 2005 5:51 PM 
> > To: everything-list@eskimo.com 
> > Subject: Re: Plaga 
> > 
> > We discussed Plaga's paper back in June, 2002. I reported some skeptical 
> > analysis of the paper by John Baez of sci.physics fame, at 
> > http://www.escribe.com/science/theory/m3686.html . I also gave some 
> > reasons of my own why arbitrary inter-universe quantum communication 
> > should be impossible. 
> > 
> > Hal Finney 

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RE: Plaga

2005-05-25 Thread Lee Corbin
I could not find who suggested Plaga's paper recently, but
thanks to whoever it was. Whether Plaga is right or wrong,
his introductory remarks and general presentation are
simply superb.

There is even the very noteworthy (or humorous, I can't decide)
sentence which reads "Independent of what one thinks about the
MWI a priori, this is also a very systematic way to make
experimental progress in the  question of the interpretation
of QM, because in the MWI the predictions for any conceivable
experiment are free from philosophical subtleties...(!)"

Lee

P.S. Thanks also to Saibal:

> Plaga's paper has been published:
 
> "Proposal for an experimental test of the
> many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics
 
http://xxx.lanl.gov/PS_cache/quant-ph/pdf/9510/9510007.pdf


Found.Phys. 27 (1997) 559
 
arXiv: quant-ph/9510007

> -Original Message-
> From: "Hal Finney" [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, May 24, 2005 5:51 PM
> To: everything-list@eskimo.com
> Subject: Re: Plaga
> 
> We discussed Plaga's paper back in June, 2002.  I reported some skeptical
> analysis of the paper by John Baez of sci.physics fame, at
> http://www.escribe.com/science/theory/m3686.html .  I also gave some
> reasons of my own why arbitrary inter-universe quantum communication
> should be impossible.
> 
> Hal Finney



Re: Plaga

2005-05-25 Thread Bruno Marchal


Le 25-mai-05, à 17:59, aet.radal ssg a écrit :

From the initial page from the included link to the archive: "I'm no 
physicist so I don't know for sure that these implications would
follow, but I am very doubtful that interworld communication is 
consistent

with the basics of quantum mechanics.  The fact that this paper has not
been published in peer reviewed journals in 7 years indicates that it
probably doesn't work."


Ooh... you should not make inferences like that. I could give you 
10,000 reasons for not publishing. But I have not the time because I 
have a deadline today!


I red Plaga's paper. It is extremely interesting. It belongs to the 
family of Weinberg's result. Some hoped that a slight delinearisation 
of QM would "explain the collapse". Reasoning a-la Weinberg Plaga shows 
that it is the contrary which happens. Not only we keep the MW but they 
became more "real" in some sense.  It shows the MWI is stable for 
slight "variation of the SWE". this confirms MWI in a deeper way. It 
shows quantum non linearity  contradicts thermodynamics! This is a 
powerful argument in favor of both pure linear QM and MWI.


(Good for me, it shows nature confirms the lobian machine's inability 
to observe kestrels and starlings when they look enough closely to 
themselves)


Bruno

http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/




Re: Plaga

2005-05-25 Thread Jesse Mazer

aet.radal ssg wrote:

From the initial page from the included link to the archive: "I'm no 
physicist so I don't know for sure that >these implications would

follow, but I am very doubtful that interworld communication is consistent
with the basics of quantum mechanics.  The fact that this paper has not
been published in peer reviewed journals in 7 years indicates that it
probably doesn't work."

Back when I wasn't long in the field of video production I was well aware 
of the insistance and belief of >TV engineers that a single tube industrial 
color video camera was not broadcast quality. Working in >cable, where they 
were used for cablecast, I had plenty of opportunity to look at picture 
quality, etc. and >came to the conclusion that it shouldn't be a problem. 2 
years later I got the chance to prove it when a >local news station sent a 
crew out to cover something that I was shooting. In the end I gave them 
>the editied sequence I had shot (now down two generations), and they took 
it and edited it into their >story, which would have taken it down a third. 
Then they broadcasted it over the air. I taped it off-air and >the results 
were conclusive - I was right, all the nay-sayer engineers were wrong. A 
$40,000 Ikegami  >vs a $1,500 Panasonic and it was a tie except for one 
slight red bleed from a costume due to the >Saticon tube bias toward red in 
the camera I used, which could have been color corrected with a time >base 
corrector, but whoever dubbed the tape left the red level a little too hot.


My point being that that was the first in a long line of "you can'ts" that 
I've faced which I eventually >proved, "you can". Thus I have a dim view of 
such positions when they aren't backed up with >experiments that prove so 
*conclusively*. As long as the possibility exists, I keep an open mind. 
>Besides, if unbriddled skepticism was right all the time, we wouldn't be 
using computers, flying, or >even have phones of any kind, just to name a 
few things.


There is a fundamental difference between claims that we can never do 
something because the engineering problems are too great, and claims that we 
can never do something because the laws of physics themselves say it's 
impossible. For example, I've heard people say things like "I'm sure we'll 
eventually break the light-speed barrier, after all, once people thought it 
was impossible that we'd ever break the sound barrier but they've been 
proved wrong". But the two are not really comparable, because no one ever 
thought the laws of physics said breaking the sound barrier was impossible, 
they just thought the technical challenges to doing so would be too 
difficult, whereas the light-speed barrier is built into the basic structure 
of relativity (although there are possible loopholes in general relativity 
like wormholes, where you get to distant destinations quickly without ever 
*locally* exceeding the speed of light).


Similarly, when Hal Finney suggests he thinks interworld communication is 
impossible, I think he's suggesting that it would violate basic principles 
of QM, not that it's too big of a technical challenge. I also saw this 
suggested in the book "Schrodinger's Rabbits" by Colin Bruce, a pop science 
book about the MWI (p. 137):


"If only we could do a clear and unambiguous communication-between-worlds 
experiment. Then there would be no room for argument about the reality of 
many-worlds. Unfortunately, the laws of physics do not seem to allow such a 
thing.


"This is frustrating because two potentially useful methods of harnessing 
the power of many-worlds, which we will look at in detail shortly, can be 
described in terms of sharing resources between worlds, or even sharing 
information between worlds. For example, a loose way of describing the 
operation of a quantum computer is as follows: As worlds start to diverge, 
hundreds of billions of different copies of the computer come into 
existence. Each of these computer copies can work on a different 
calculation. The shared results of their labors, however, can be made 
available to all the diverging worlds created when the bubble of Hilbert 
space describing the computer is systematically collapsed by measurement at 
the end of the calculation.


"This makes it sound as if Hilbert space might possibly be used as a kind of 
mailbox for communicating between worlds. Unfortunately, the mathematics 
that describes Hilbert space rules this out because it implies that 
everything that goes on in Hilbert space is reversible. As soon as you try 
to take information out of Hilbert space, that reversibility is destroyed. 
Such acts of measurement, by definition, cause decoherence. You can preserve 
multiworld access to a bubble of Hilbert space only by allowing it to evolve 
undisturbed. It reminds me of C.S. Lewis's "Wood Between the Worlds" 
described in the Magician's Nephew. Any Hilbert space accessible from more 
than one world line must be a timeless place, in which we 

Re: Plaga

2005-05-25 Thread Saibal Mitra



Plaga's paper has been published:
 
''Proposal for an experimental test of the 
many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics''
 
Found.Phys. 27 (1997) 559
 
arXiv: quant-ph/9510007
 
 
 
 
-Defeat Spammers by 
launching DDoS attacks on Spam-Websites: http://www.hillscapital.com/antispam/

  - Oorspronkelijk bericht - 
  Van: 
  aet.radal 
  ssg 
  Aan: everything-list@eskimo.com 
  Verzonden: Wednesday, May 25, 2005 05:59 
  PM
  Onderwerp: Re: Plaga
  
  From the initial page from the included link to the archive: "I'm no 
  physicist so I don't know for sure that these implications wouldfollow, 
  but I am very doubtful that interworld communication is consistentwith the 
  basics of quantum mechanics.  The fact that this paper has notbeen 
  published in peer reviewed journals in 7 years indicates that itprobably 
  doesn't work."
  Back when I wasn't long in the field of video production I was well aware 
  of the insistance and belief of TV engineers that a single tube industrial 
  color video camera was not broadcast quality. Working in cable, where they 
  were used for cablecast, I had plenty of opportunity to look at picture 
  quality, etc. and came to the conclusion that it shouldn't be a problem. 2 
  years later I got the chance to prove it when a local news station sent a crew 
  out to cover something that I was shooting. In the end I gave them 
  the editied sequence I had shot (now down two generations), and they 
  took it and edited it into their story, which would have taken it down a 
  third. Then they broadcasted it over the air. I taped it off-air and the 
  results were conclusive - I was right, all the nay-sayer engineers were 
  wrong. A $40,000 Ikegami  vs a $1,500 Panasonic and it was a tie 
  except for one slight red bleed from a costume due to the Saticon tube bias 
  toward red in the camera I used, which could have been color corrected with a 
  time base corrector, but whoever dubbed the tape left the red level a little 
  too hot. 
  My point being that that was the first in a long line of "you can'ts" that 
  I've faced which I eventually proved, "you can". Thus I have a dim view of 
  such positions when they aren't backed up with experiments that prove so 
  *conclusively*. As long as the possibility exists, I keep an open mind. 
  Besides, if unbriddled skepticism was right all the time, we wouldn't be using 
  computers, flying, or even have phones of any kind, just to name a few 
  things.- Original Message - From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  To: everything-list@eskimo.com Subject: Re: Plaga Date: Tue, 24 
  May 2005 17:51:13 -0700 (PDT) > > We discussed Plaga's paper 
  back in June, 2002. I reported some skeptical > analysis of the paper 
  by John Baez of sci.physics fame, at > 
  http://www.escribe.com/science/theory/m3686.html . I also gave some > 
  reasons of my own why arbitrary inter-universe quantum communication > 
  should be impossible. > > Hal Finney -- 
  ___Sign-up for 
  Ads Free at Mail.comhttp://www.mail.com/?sr=signup


Re: Plaga

2005-05-25 Thread aet.radal ssg
From the initial page from the included link to the archive: "I'm no physicist so I don't know for sure that these implications wouldfollow, but I am very doubtful that interworld communication is consistentwith the basics of quantum mechanics.  The fact that this paper has notbeen published in peer reviewed journals in 7 years indicates that itprobably doesn't work."
Back when I wasn't long in the field of video production I was well aware of the insistance and belief of TV engineers that a single tube industrial color video camera was not broadcast quality. Working in cable, where they were used for cablecast, I had plenty of opportunity to look at picture quality, etc. and came to the conclusion that it shouldn't be a problem. 2 years later I got the chance to prove it when a local news station sent a crew out to cover something that I was shooting. In the end I gave them the editied sequence I had shot (now down two generations), and they took it and edited it into their story, which would have taken it down a third. Then they broadcasted it over the air. I taped it off-air and the results were conclusive - I was right, all the nay-sayer engineers were wrong. A $40,000 Ikegami  vs a $1,500 Panasonic and it was a tie except for one slight red bleed from a costume due to the Saticon tube bias toward red in the camera I used, which could have been color corrected with a time base corrector, but whoever dubbed the tape left the red level a little too hot. 
My point being that that was the first in a long line of "you can'ts" that I've faced which I eventually proved, "you can". Thus I have a dim view of such positions when they aren't backed up with experiments that prove so *conclusively*. As long as the possibility exists, I keep an open mind. Besides, if unbriddled skepticism was right all the time, we wouldn't be using computers, flying, or even have phones of any kind, just to name a few things.- Original Message - From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: everything-list@eskimo.com Subject: Re: Plaga Date: Tue, 24 May 2005 17:51:13 -0700 (PDT) > > We discussed Plaga's paper back in June, 2002. I reported some skeptical > analysis of the paper by John Baez of sci.physics fame, at > http://www.escribe.com/science/theory/m3686.html . I also gave some > reasons of my own why arbitrary inter-universe quantum communication > should be impossible. > > Hal Finney 

-- 
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http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup




Re: Plaga

2005-05-24 Thread rmiller

At 07:51 PM 5/24/2005, Hal Finney wrote:

We discussed Plaga's paper back in June, 2002.  I reported some skeptical
analysis of the paper by John Baez of sci.physics fame, at
http://www.escribe.com/science/theory/m3686.html .  I also gave some
reasons of my own why arbitrary inter-universe quantum communication
should be impossible.

Hal Finney


I don't recall that discussion; may not have been a list subscriber at that 
time.  At any rate, thanks for the info.


RMiller 





Re: Plaga

2005-05-24 Thread "Hal Finney"
We discussed Plaga's paper back in June, 2002.  I reported some skeptical
analysis of the paper by John Baez of sci.physics fame, at
http://www.escribe.com/science/theory/m3686.html .  I also gave some
reasons of my own why arbitrary inter-universe quantum communication
should be impossible.

Hal Finney



Re: Plaga

2005-05-24 Thread rmiller

All,
In my recent post I noted that Plaga's article has been on the xxx site 
since their server was a 386.  I want to be clear that my comment was not 
meant as a dig at Plaga, nor his paper--just that it has been around since 
'95 and I can't recall anyone commenting (constructively) on it.  As for 
astute knowledge in the QM Codex being a requirement, I seem to recall 
that, before Ed Whitten took an interest in physics, his undergrad degree 
was in History.  Einstein was a---well, we all know what Einstein was 
during his miracle year.*


I would suggest re Plaga or anyone else discussed here, it's not the time 
spent in a particular academic trench that makes the idea great, it's the 
quality of the insight.


R.Miller


*(and Elvis Costello was a computer programmer---the list goes on.)