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...This must raise the questions: What was the gamma ray photon aimed at? And, what did it hit, if the electron was not there before it was hit?
It is good logic to rationalize that a particle does not need to be observed in order to exist.
The biggest problem is that the measuring device cannot be independent of the object that it is measuring. It affects the object it is measuring.
Einstein would have been proud of you. Trouble is that what our natural logic tells us is "obviously" the case, can break down very easily.
Quote from: Jeffrey The biggest problem is that the measuring device cannot be independent of the object that it is measuring. It affects the object it is measuring. Undoubtedly; but it doesn't say how one could aim at, or hit, an object that doesn't exist until it is hit.
Quote from: Bill S on 05/07/2018 01:48:23Quote from: Jeffrey The biggest problem is that the measuring device cannot be independent of the object that it is measuring. It affects the object it is measuring. Undoubtedly; but it doesn't say how one could aim at, or hit, an object that doesn't exist until it is hit.Well then, the object has to exist. An indeterminacy relates more to our lack of understanding than to whether or not a particle exists. Quantum mechanics is a model. It approximates an underlying reality. We are taught to believe what our senses tell us but they are fallible.
Well that leads nicely to the concept of an expectation value.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expectation_value_(quantum_mechanics)
Well then, the object has to exist. An indeterminacy relates more to our lack of understanding than to whether or not a particle exists. Quantum mechanics is a model. It approximates an underlying reality.
Heisenberg, in developing his case for the uncertainty principle, used the example of “observing” an electron by hitting it with a gamma ray photon. This act established the location of the electron, at the instant of contact, but gave no information about its velocity.Bohr used this same example in defending complementarity; arguing that it supported the contention that “observation” created reality, in the quantum realm. The reasoning seemed to be that the electron had neither position, nor velocity, until an observation was made.This must raise the questions: What was the gamma ray photon aimed at? And, what did it hit, if the electron was not there before it was hit?
I know this isn't that much more satisfactory than the "shut up and calculate" philosophy,
Quote from: ChiralSPO I know this isn't that much more satisfactory than the "shut up and calculate" philosophy, I have to disagree with that. It's the best explanation of the (possible) situation I've seen. People have written books and said less that is meaningful to "hitch-hikers" than that.Colin's addition is the icing on the cake.
The Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum theory holds that there is no reality at a quantum level, without observation.
It approximates an underlying reality.