NastyPierre
Virgin
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2006
- Posts
- 17
misunderstanding
The “misunderstanding” arises because individuals yet cling to the belief they are examining an ‘object’ rather then an ‘image’. i agree energy is neither a wave or a particle (and both); it is a ‘third’ beyond the ‘range’ of consciousness, which our ever-growing array of instruments (for bringing things closer) proves by splitting every ‘thing’ we eventually find. Whether or not what you believe to exist would if consciousness did not, is a metaphysical subject. To suggest the universe is ‘as we see it’ is childish. To suggest we can ‘know’ matter ‘in and of itself’ is superstitious. The only thing we can say as humans is, so to speak: that memories taking shape through the images we form of the potential appearing to exist is our reality. To ‘objectify’ images is psychological stagnation, petrifaction. Do ‘objects’ possess color? i think not. Can you learn from a book? i think not. Such beliefs are remnants of our more primitive psychology. Do not get me too wrong, i realise we have the ability to differentiate, and this has contributed to the illusion of autonomy which tends to separates us from the whole. But can we be separate? i think not. For me, Quantum physics and Analytical psychology are disciplines of consciousness that deal with the same ‘object’ (i prefer “potential”) from two opposite points of view. They represent a peek at the next ‘order’ of thinking. Classical Physics is an order that works well in its domain, but needs to be left at the gate, otherwise it stands like a dogma and becomes a religion, complete with rituals meant to keep those who follow it in check. Just as libido is the driving force of life, and always forward moving, so too is consciousness evolving. Sorry, need to keep this shorter. hope to hear from you soon
NP
dr_mabeuse said:I'm not sure that I get Smolin's point. On the one hand, if some of the constants of nature are changing as a function of time, that would eventually be detectable, and in fact I think there's some discussion of that now with the discovery that the rate of the expansion of the universe seems to be is incrasing. I heard something about the possibility that the speed of light might be changing too, but I forget the details.
If all of the constants of nature are changing - for instance, space and time and mass and the speed of light- then it would make no difference and there'd be no operational way of detecting it.
Similarly, it really doesn't matter is there are an infinite number of universes out there "somewhere" unless we have some way of interacting with them. We may as well say that we're all surrounded by invisible angels who we can never see or detect. There's no way to demnstrate it, so science can't say anything about it. By definition, such a theory is unscientific.
It sounds to me like Smolin's getting very close to the Anthropic Principle, which says that the universe is the way it is because this is the universe that supports Us.
Maybe I'll read him again though. I didn't understand more than I understood, I think.
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Jenny--
I don't know why you say quantum mechanics hasn't been proven. The ability of quantum to correctly predict all sorts of physicial phenomenon has been well established for around 80 years now. The main problem with the practical use of quantum theory in chemistry is that doing the calculations is usually more difficult than doing the actual experiment, which is an example of another kind of limit in science. Our math isn't sophisticated enough.
And the problem I was trying to point out in string theory is that if it actually predicted anything, then it could be tested by seeing if those predictions are true or false. But as far as I know, ST is a model that describes but doesn't predict, and that's why physicists are so frustrated with it and why that one guy described it as "not even wrong".
I know that it's a pretty esoteric subject and doesn't affect us much one way or the other, but if ST turned out to be both true and predictive (heuristic, as they say, meaning it led to more knowledge), if we had the key to all matter and knew how all the forces in nature were related, that could be some pretty heavy and useful knowledge indeed.
But also, ST raises the question of just when does science reach its limits? As we try to find out what the universe is made of, will we just keep on finding particles made of particles made of particles going on forever? Or will we finally bang up against an absolute that says, this is it? And if so, what will that absolute look like? I think the limit will look something like this - a theory that can't be tested any further.
When I was first in school, we had your basic electron, proton, neutron, positron, maybe a neutrino or two, and thought that was pretty much it.
Then came some anti-particles, and mesons, pions, and then a whole explosion of some other ugly sons of bitches, all sorts of weights and charges and spins and half-lives, like some one had opened the asylum doors. I pretty much lost interest.
Then they got down to the nest level: quarks, and we really thought this was it - the ultimate. Quarks made some sense out of the whole mess and I really kind of hoped that was it. It was enough already.
And now we're down to the next level: string theory. Are we finally there? Or are we going to keep going? Does anyone still care?
Next level I'm sure is going to be Angels on Pinheads.
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Well, they wouldn't even have to prove all that stuff. All they'd have to do would be to say, "According to my String theory, we should observe such-and-such an effect when so-and-so happens" and predict something that hadn't been observed before. That would at least give them some credibility and some reason to believe in their 11 dimensions.
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No offense, and I'm not exactly sure of the context that Pauli and Pohm were speaking in, because mass and energy can be treated alike on the quantum level and it just depends onhow you want to think of them, but this gets close to a common myth about quantum mechanics and consciousness: that at the quantum level, events are somehow determined by the observers consciousness and expectations, and that's a grave misunderstanding of quantum, still being perpetuated even by some PhD physicists who should know better.
The misunderstanding arose from the early days of quantum in the 20's when it was observed that the electron could behave both as a wave or a particle, depending on the experiment one subjected it to. If you treated it like a wave it acted like a wave. If you treated it like a particle, it acted like a particle. To the thinking of the day, it could not be both, and it drove physicists crazy. It seemed to know what the experimenter wanted to see and acted accordingly. There was talk of an "observer effect".
It was discovered that the electron (all moving matter in fact, only it's most noticeable with the smallest particles) has a wave associated with it, so it's neither a particle or a wave but both and neither. Treat it like a wave, it acts like a wave. Treat it like a particle, it acts like a particle. No observer effect. The electron knows what it is, even if the observer doesn't. The electron (and the universe) still exists even when the physicist goes to sleep. It's not all in our heads. The universe and the electron really exist.
By the way, it's this wave nature of particles that's responsible for Heisenberg's Indeterminacy Principle (populaerly known as the Uncertainty principle) which says that you can't know both a particle's position and momentum at the same time. Its wave nature makes it impossible to pinpoint.
But there's still plenty of room for a writer in the universe, thank God.
The “misunderstanding” arises because individuals yet cling to the belief they are examining an ‘object’ rather then an ‘image’. i agree energy is neither a wave or a particle (and both); it is a ‘third’ beyond the ‘range’ of consciousness, which our ever-growing array of instruments (for bringing things closer) proves by splitting every ‘thing’ we eventually find. Whether or not what you believe to exist would if consciousness did not, is a metaphysical subject. To suggest the universe is ‘as we see it’ is childish. To suggest we can ‘know’ matter ‘in and of itself’ is superstitious. The only thing we can say as humans is, so to speak: that memories taking shape through the images we form of the potential appearing to exist is our reality. To ‘objectify’ images is psychological stagnation, petrifaction. Do ‘objects’ possess color? i think not. Can you learn from a book? i think not. Such beliefs are remnants of our more primitive psychology. Do not get me too wrong, i realise we have the ability to differentiate, and this has contributed to the illusion of autonomy which tends to separates us from the whole. But can we be separate? i think not. For me, Quantum physics and Analytical psychology are disciplines of consciousness that deal with the same ‘object’ (i prefer “potential”) from two opposite points of view. They represent a peek at the next ‘order’ of thinking. Classical Physics is an order that works well in its domain, but needs to be left at the gate, otherwise it stands like a dogma and becomes a religion, complete with rituals meant to keep those who follow it in check. Just as libido is the driving force of life, and always forward moving, so too is consciousness evolving. Sorry, need to keep this shorter. hope to hear from you soon
NP

