Hello everyone! |
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Hello everyone! |
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Last edited by Rainman; 11-08-2014 at 10:18 AM.
My music - www.soundcloud.com/jaredemmanuel
At very first I thought you were Xei, but then I realized. Welcome back Ninja. |
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I understand your question by the way, and I can only answer with a resounding "I don't know." Why? Because I haven't thought of the next way I could expect a particle to behave. It's clear already that the notion that a superstate or superposition of sorts exists in which the entirety of the universe is contained in all its fragments and can call upon themselves willingly to manifest themselves in a way that results in a one final outcome. What it is it? Exactly what you expect it to be. |
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If the universe is created by consciousness, then expectation might conceivably be the laws of physics. On the other hand, maybe the laws of physics are fixed, in which case expectation probably matters little. |
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So ... is this the real universe, or is it just a preliminary study?
I don't really know what you mean by... particles act classically when we observe them. Particles act according to the laws of quantum mechanics, all the time. These are simply... the laws of the universe. There is no "classical version" of them which kicks in when we're looking. Classical physics just falls out of the equations of quantum physics on large scales. For instance... the "orbit" of an electron around a nucleus is explained by quantum physics. The fact that energy is a discrete quantity is what stops the electron from losing energy and spiralling into the nucleus. When you're "observing" an atom, the electrons don't all suddenly start spiralling into the nucleus. |
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The problem with your position, as I see it, is this: |
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Last edited by Voldmer; 11-10-2014 at 09:27 AM.
So ... is this the real universe, or is it just a preliminary study?
Well not really. It's how we see the universe working. |
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Like Denziloe, I see the source of the OP's confusion in a muddle-up about classical and quantum-physics supposedly changing from one to the other upon observation and I guess, that's dealt with already. |
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Last edited by StephL; 11-13-2014 at 06:33 PM.
Maybe I didn't state it quite directly enough, but I wasn't suggesting that observations suddenly became erratic. What I meant was that as we started to look more carefully, it turned out that the existing theories didn't quite get the details right. And that encouraged deeper study, and taking a fresh look at the problems, which eventually led to new theories. |
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So ... is this the real universe, or is it just a preliminary study?
That's still true. Classical physics is still an excellent model of the domain of observations which it concerns. It was and still does make extremely accurate predictions. No new observations will somehow make that false. |
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The point being that classical physics doesn't provide an accurate unified model. Yes, it's accurate on a relatively large spectrum, but too far on any end of the spectrum and it breaks down. You are agreeing with what both of them are saying but telling them they are wrong by making the distinction in the first place. Newton's theory of gravity provides an accurate model for us to follow but does not account for many of the things covered in either of Einstein's theories of relativity. Does it provide an accurate way with which to model a great part of what we can observe? Of course, but when you apply it to other areas it isn't as accurate because it is far simpler. I mean, an extremely important distinction here is discovering that gravity only seems like a force rather than actually "being" one per se. Can you see why now that it's important to differentiate between things here? You can claim up and down that it isn't, but then why do you do it in the first place then? |
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You kinda just... ignored my counterexample. |
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Thanks for your replies, everyone. |
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Last edited by Rainman; 11-09-2014 at 09:50 AM.
My music - www.soundcloud.com/jaredemmanuel
I realised that, and only stated it here directly in order to make my own post self-contained. |
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So ... is this the real universe, or is it just a preliminary study?
Welp, sorry about that. Wouldn't be the first time I was wrong. Don't typically look at member's join dates, maybe it's about that time, eh? |
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Sorry, Denziloe, I didn't notice your counterexample the first time through. |
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Last edited by Rainman; 11-10-2014 at 07:41 PM.
My music - www.soundcloud.com/jaredemmanuel
On a side note, everyone sucks at calculus. It is like trying to learn a new language. I wouldn't give up just because you suck at it, it just takes more practice and eventually it all starts coming together. |
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Haha. Thanks Alric. I am fantastic at learning languages, but absolutely dreadfully unskilled at calculus! |
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My music - www.soundcloud.com/jaredemmanuel
I once had a calculus teacher that said, "If you take calculus and pass it on the first try you are very smart. If you fail and retake it and pass it on the second try you are very smart. If you pass it on your 5th try, you are still very smart." |
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Well - there is calculus and then there is calculus. What I learned was differential and integral calculus for two-dimensional graphs, on the simplest level there is. It was calculus none the less, but of course there's more behind it, capable of causing head-aches at least in maths students, no doubt. |
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