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Quote from: lightarrow on 16/05/2013 12:47:46Don't know exactly what you mean but if you mean that the collapse is *caused* by the human act of observation (the man who opens the box to see if the cat is dead or alive), then it's not. The collapse is caused by the act of measurement.Quite. And an 'act of measurement' occurs for any interaction with the system (e.g. any particle interaction).
Don't know exactly what you mean but if you mean that the collapse is *caused* by the human act of observation (the man who opens the box to see if the cat is dead or alive), then it's not. The collapse is caused by the act of measurement.
... you have only changed the name of the process.
What's an "interaction"?
For example, when a beam of light is bent, without absorption, by a glass prism, does the beam "interact" with the glass or not? Explain why yes or why not.
...I suppose we could suggest a big bang as the origin of the cosmos, but as far as I am aware there is no evidence to indicate that this might be the situation, so we would simply be plucking a theory out of the air, which is not the best foundation for anything resembling serious enquiry.
In mathematics we can have more than one infinity, but in reality, infinity must be everything; if it does not include everything, it is not infinite. If we postulate more than one infinity, then neither is infinite, because the contents of one infinity must always be excluded from the other; which is nonsense.
..... it is not clear to what you are referring with 'infinity'; spatial extent? temporal extent? Some explanation/clarification required.
One of the ideas that is central to my thinking is that if there had ever been a time when there was nothing, there would still be nothing now.
It is no more a scientific proposition than saying "God created the Universe", so we can ask no more questions about its origin.
If there was nothing before the Universe; was there an infinity of nothing?If not: what came before the nothing?Why might it be preferable to imagine that there was nothing, rather than that there was a timeless cosmos?Which of those is, logically, more likely to give rise to a universe with space and time?
Quote from: lightarrow on 18/05/2013 11:48:46QuoteWhat's an "interaction"?It is the mutual effect of two objects on each other, involving the transfer of energy between objects and/or fields.
QuoteWhat's an "interaction"?It is the mutual effect of two objects on each other, involving the transfer of energy between objects and/or fields.
QuoteFor example, when a beam of light is bent, without absorption, by a glass prism, does the beam "interact" with the glass or not? Explain why yes or why not.Yes, it interacts. Considered as a wave, the frequency remains constant but the phase velocity is changed entering the glass; the refractive index of glass varies with frequency, so the change in phase velocity of the different light frequencies varies, resulting in the frequency dependent refraction & splitting of the beam. Considered as particles, the photons interact with the electrons in the glass, by scattering, absorption, and re-emission (see Feynman's 'QED', ch.3, p.107).
What do you say about this Lightarrow?
Incidentally, I'm not sure the idea of a 'timeless cosmos' has any useful meaning, but maybe there's a place for it in the maths...
But if the light beam is made of single photons, a photon's wavefunction doesn't collapse after having passed through the glass prism, so that "interaction" is not a "measure" of the quantum state of the photon (in particular, of its frequency).
... consider Cantor's mathematical infinities. His countable and uncountable infinities found their places in the maths of the time, and have remained there. What is rarely considered is that he discovered that there existed an infinity of these infinities. Where does that fit into "the maths"?
... I would from my first definition expect anything meeting another object to interact, especially if passing through it.