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Much appreciated! Hope to read your 2 cents sometime soon
Then again, we introduce a lot of new ideas into this world. Like 'ethics' for example, could there be a entropy to ideas? Are we a ordered system of thoughts?
However, and this is where the distinction comes in: this so-called 'observer' effect does not occur naturally. Imagine a sunrise where the first beams of light are just reaching over from the other side of the horizon, and the light passes through 2 tiny openings in, say, a tree, and shines onto an otherwise dark surface behind it, say, a rock. This will always produce an interference pattern (i.e. no observer effect)
Consciousness can alter the experiment, but simply changing the theory, used to bridge the invisible primary information with the more obvious secondary information we all can see.
How could you be sure of that if it were not observed?
Which makes sense according to Einstein, because they are travelling so fast that they don't experience any time at all. To them all events happen instantaneously. The entire universe, to a photon, is instantaneous.
Before I answer your question, I should ask one first: what exactly do you mean by "observed"?
Quote “In summary, quantum state collapse is not driven just by conscious observers, and "Schrodinger's Cat" was just a teaching tool invented to try to make this fact more obvious by reducing the observer-driven notion to absurdity. Unfortunately, many popular science writers in our day continue to propagate the misconception that a quantum state (and therefore reality itself) is determined by conscious observers”.Exactly!
“In summary, quantum state collapse is not driven just by conscious observers, and "Schrodinger's Cat" was just a teaching tool invented to try to make this fact more obvious by reducing the observer-driven notion to absurdity. Unfortunately, many popular science writers in our day continue to propagate the misconception that a quantum state (and therefore reality itself) is determined by conscious observers”.
I see that that changes our understanding, but fail to see how this changes the reality of the physical event that is being observed.
In order that a conscious being may say with any certainty that a particular event/effect has occurred in the physical world, she/he must be (consciously) aware of it. So, in this specific instance, but not always, I refer to conscious observation.
The fact that is doesn't fit with a classical viewpoint is not a flaw in quantum mechanics.
That seems to bring us to the point, which I think you were making elsewhere, that what makes the difference is whether or not the information is recorded.
The way I understand it goes something like this:Special relativity provides for an inertial frame for everything that has mass, but it does not cover massless particles such as the photon. Talking of the photon having a frame of reference is, strictly speaking, not scientific. The photon must always be observed as travelling at “c”. It cannot be at rest relative to anything. Of course, one could argue that it must be at rest relative to itself, but that is not a very productive line of reasoning. Science has not actually produced definite proof that the photon cannot be assigned an inertial frame, but to maintain that it does have one is pure speculation, and maintaining that it does not have one seems to be the generally accepted position.Taking the time dilation equation to its ultimate conclusion may seem a logical thing to do, but it is not supported by special relativity because of the lack of mass of the photon which puts it outside the remit of special relativity. It seems that the best we can say is that we have no way of knowing if photons experience time, or not. Nor do we have any scientifically accredited theory that covers this, nor any way to test the idea experimentally, as no massive object can reach the speed of light, and a clock cannot be fixed to a photon.
The problem with any argument against an aspect of quantum mechanics is the lack of full understanding.
Quantum mechanics is founded upon experimental observation and how to explain it. The fact that is doesn't fit with a classical viewpoint is not a flaw in quantum mechanics. I am currently studying a variety of aspects of QM. What I have learnt so far confirms this.
What I'm particularly interested, here, is the possibility that information is something that exists in its own right. Or, is it something that emerges from "something", because it has to be information about something?