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| Tags: controversy, physics |
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#1
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The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics is the majority
view, held by most physics professors in the country. Since we live in a democracy, majority views should dominate and the goal of this post is not to challenge this dominance. The goal of this post is to point out that the common view that a lot of big names in physics such as Einstein, Bell, de Broglie, and Schrodinger, disagreed with the Copenhagen interpretation is a massive understatement. Einstein did not just disagree with it, he repeatedly said on many occasions that he "did not take it seriously". "did not take it seriously" is a euphemism for his thinking that the view currently held by the majority of professors around the country about one of the most important theories in physics is (sorry) BS. Bell, they guy who authored the Bell inequalities which led to the dominance of the Copenhagen interpretation also did not just disagree with the majority view... he called it "immoral". "immoral" is a euphemism for (I REALLY APOLOGIZE)... pornographic. So the goal of the post is to challenge the "controversy" qualification and claim that it is more like a scandal than a controversy. Actually more like a family scandal where in this case Einstein is the drunk grandpa making unacceptable comments and everyone is trying to hush him (don't take that last comment seriously). How is this related to relativity? The majority of physicists do agree with Einstein on that General Relativity is THE most beautiful theory of physics ever written. A huge field of research now is of course that of trying to quantize GR. This, to Einstein would amount to the most subversive of conspiracies. He gave us the most beautiful theory, and how do we show are appreciation? By submitting it to what he thought was the most ridiculous of theories... mindless quantization! I plead that people trying to mindlessly quantize GR pause and try to think of a more clever way of joining GR with quantum mechanics one that would also solve the measurement problem. |
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#2
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On Apr 27, 11:08*am, wrote:
[...] Bell, they guy who authored the Bell inequalities which led to the dominance of the Copenhagen interpretation also did not just disagree with the majority view... he called it "immoral". "immoral" is a euphemism for (I REALLY APOLOGIZE)... pornographic. [...] Probability makes me hot. |
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#3
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wrote in message ... The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics is the majority view, held by most physics professors in the country. Since we live in a democracy, majority views should dominate and the goal of this post is not to challenge this dominance. The goal of this post is to point out that the common view that a lot of big names in physics such as Einstein, Bell, de Broglie, and Schrodinger, disagreed with the Copenhagen interpretation is a massive understatement. Einstein did not just disagree with it, he repeatedly said on many occasions that he "did not take it seriously". "did not take it seriously" is a euphemism for his thinking that the view currently held by the majority of professors around the country about one of the most important theories in physics is (sorry) BS. Bell, they guy who authored the Bell inequalities which led to the dominance of the Copenhagen interpretation also did not just disagree with the majority view... he called it "immoral". "immoral" is a euphemism for (I REALLY APOLOGIZE)... pornographic. So the goal of the post is to challenge the "controversy" qualification and claim that it is more like a scandal than a controversy. Actually more like a family scandal where in this case Einstein is the drunk grandpa making unacceptable comments and everyone is trying to hush him (don't take that last comment seriously). How is this related to relativity? The majority of physicists do agree with Einstein on that General Relativity is THE most beautiful theory of physics ever written. A huge field of research now is of course that of trying to quantize GR. This, to Einstein would amount to the most subversive of conspiracies. He gave us the most beautiful theory, and how do we show are appreciation? By submitting it to what he thought was the most ridiculous of theories... mindless quantization! I plead that people trying to mindlessly quantize GR pause and try to think of a more clever way of joining GR with quantum mechanics one that would also solve the measurement problem. I think think is one the clearest, to-the-point posts I have read on this list, bar none. Steve Bell |
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#4
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On Apr 27, 2:08*pm, wrote:
The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics is the majority view, held by most physics professors in the country. Since we live in a democracy, majority views should dominate and the goal of this post is not to challenge this dominance. The goal of this post is to point out that the common view that a lot of big names in physics such as Einstein, Bell, de Broglie, and Schrodinger, disagreed with the Copenhagen interpretation is a massive understatement. Einstein did not just disagree with it, he repeatedly said on many occasions that he "did not take it seriously". "did not take it seriously" is a euphemism for his thinking that the view currently held by the majority of professors around the country about one of the most important theories in physics is (sorry) BS. Bell, they guy who authored the Bell inequalities which led to the dominance of the Copenhagen interpretation also did not just disagree with the majority view... he called it "immoral". "immoral" is a euphemism for (I REALLY APOLOGIZE)... pornographic. So the goal of the post is to challenge the "controversy" qualification and claim that it is more like a scandal than a controversy. Actually more like a family scandal where in this case Einstein is the drunk grandpa making unacceptable comments and everyone is trying to hush him (don't take that last comment seriously). Well, actually, if it were just a matter of esteemed experts arguing, with the surviving theory being the product of one group overwhelmingly convincing the bulk of another group, then you'd be right -- it'd be just a family scandal, a political brouhaha, a corporate power fight. But fortunately, there is a simple recourse that physicists use. What they do is they say, "OK, let's just *suppose* that you're right for a second. Then the theory you're proposing would also suggest that under certain circumstances, we'd be able to perform an experiment and see such-and-such and NOT so-and-so. I don't believe for a second that you'd see such-and-such. Everything I've learned tells me the answer will be so-and-so." And then the experiment is performed and the matter is settled. And in fact, Einstein and Bell both did this -- though they didn't believe the Copenhagen version of quantum mechanics and they didn't believe in quantum entanglement, they proposed the idea of the experiment and they calculated what the result would be if they were wrong and what it would be if they were right. Then, in a set of experiments initiated by Aspect et al., the measurement was actually done, and lo and behold, Einstein had gambled wrong. Now, the thing to note is that, even though Einstein was wrong about what the result would be, he thought about it long enough to propose the experiment that would prove him wrong. How is this related to relativity? The majority of physicists do agree with Einstein on that General Relativity is THE most beautiful theory of physics ever written. A huge field of research now is of course that of trying to quantize GR. This, to Einstein would amount to the most subversive of conspiracies. Well, to tell you the truth, he would have seen the experimental evidence in support of quantum mechanics by now, so I'm fairly sure he would have changed his mind on that. Note that Einstein also did not believe in black holes, which were a direct consequence of his own theory. Neither did Johnny Wheeler, who in fact coined the term "black hole". He thought the whole notion of unstoppable gravitational collapse, infinitely dense matter, and a spacetime singularity was just ugly as all get out. But, after a while, he convinced himself he was wrong about that, too, and then he worked like crazy to understand them better. He gave us the most beautiful theory, and how do we show are appreciation? By submitting it to what he thought was the most ridiculous of theories... mindless quantization! I plead that people trying to mindlessly quantize GR pause and try to think of a more clever way of joining GR with quantum mechanics one that would also solve the measurement problem. |
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#5
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On Mon, 28 Apr 2008 09:23:50 -0700 (PDT), Dono
wrote: Kirsty Kitto is Rag Cahill new wife (a husband-wife crackpot team). Which one of the two are you ? Don't be jealous Dono, I am sure you'll find a compatible partener one day--probably a porcupine :-) |
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#6
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On Apr 28, 10:14 pm, Surfer wrote:
On Mon, 28 Apr 2008 09:23:50 -0700 (PDT), Dono wrote: Kirsty Kitto is Rag Cahill new wife (a husband-wife crackpot team). Which one of the two are you ? Don't be jealous Dono, I am sure you'll find a compatible partener one day--probably a porcupine :-) Which one are you? Rag, Kirsty or the porcupine? |
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#7
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On Mon, 28 Apr 2008 22:27:15 -0700 (PDT), Dono
wrote: On Apr 28, 10:14 pm, Surfer wrote: On Mon, 28 Apr 2008 09:23:50 -0700 (PDT), Dono wrote: Kirsty Kitto is Rag Cahill new wife (a husband-wife crackpot team). Which one of the two are you ? Don't be jealous Dono, I am sure you'll find a compatible partener one day--probably a porcupine :-) Which one are you? Rag, Kirsty or the porcupine? None of the above. I am just a software engineer who likes to read physics papers. |
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#8
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On Apr 29, 9:30*am, Surfer wrote:
Which one are you? Rag, Kirsty or the porcupine? None of the above. I am just a software engineer who likes to read physics papers I don't believe it: -you are too intimately involved ONLY with Cahill's ideas -the only thing you ever comment is the Cahill/Kitto papers -you repeat exactly their mistakes -you have been lying, cheating, twisting the facts too long on this forum to have any credibility There are two more members of the "Progress in Physics" group, so you are one of the group members, fishing for comments from the mainstream. The sad thing is that you don't apply any of the valid criticism you have received. |
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#9
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On Apr 27, 3:08*pm, wrote:
I plead that people trying to mindlessly quantize GR pause and try to think of a more clever way of joining GR with quantum mechanics one that would also solve the measurement problem. First, GR and QM can never be "joined". In GR G = G and h = 0. In QM g = 0 and h = h. The best you can do "joining" is to get a theory of nothing instead of a theory of everything. Now, I commend you for your post: http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/flash/youare Mike |
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#10
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"Mike" wrote in message ... On Apr 27, 3:08 pm, wrote: I plead that people trying to mindlessly quantize GR pause and try to think of a more clever way of joining GR with quantum mechanics one that would also solve the measurement problem. First, GR and QM can never be "joined". In GR G = G and h = 0. In QM g = 0 and h = h. The best you can do "joining" is to get a theory of nothing instead of a theory of everything. Now, I commend you for your post: http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/flash/youare Mike I personally believe the route taken now to merge GR and QM is doomed to failure because GR is a fundamentally deterministic theory of motion and QM is a fundamentally stochastic theory of motion. The true physical characteristic of motion is either one or the other. I can't see how it fundamentally could be both. I don't think god (if there is one) is that ambiguous g. Steve Bell |
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