Article  Einstein vs Bohr: Quantum reality is still up for grabs (philosophy of science)

#1
C C Offline
Einstein vs Bohr: Quantum reality is still up for grabs (philosophy of science)
https://iai.tv/articles/einstein-vs-bohr..._auid=2020

INTRO: For decades, the story went that Bohr’s anti-realism triumphed over Einstein’s quest for a deeper reality. Physicists were told to "shut up and calculate" and metaphysical debates were dismissed as distractions. But today, realist interpretations of quantum mechanics constantly emerge and the anti-realist position is far from the mainstream – so if Bohr won, why does almost no one take his side? University of Massachusetts Boston physicist Jacques Pienaar argues that we’ve been wrong all along – Bohr was not an anti-realist after all, and Einstein's apparent realism is not on sure-footing...

EXCERPTS: . . . You might be forgiven for thinking that realism is now dead, and anti-realism reigns supreme; but [...] In the vacuum left by realist theories, over the last few decades several new interpretations have emerged, using the tools of quantum information theory to transform the old Copenhagenism into something new. Humorously dubbed “Copenhagenish interpretations” by physicist Matt Leifer, the new contenders include, among others, neo-Copenhgenism, Relational Quantum Mechanics, and subjective Bayesian quantum mechanics – better known by its catchy moniker “QBism”.

[...] While they still toe the Copenhagen line that quantum states do not describe reality, they supplement it with a remarkable constructive claim: that physical quantities – such as specific values of properties like position or momentum – only exist in relation to the observer who measures them, and a quantity value that exists for one observer may not exist for a second observer, if the latter performs a different, “incompatible” measurement (Pienaar 2021). Reflecting on this on that rainy day, I wondered: what if the real story behind the Bohr-Einstein debates was more complex than just ‘realism’ versus ‘anti-realism’?

Einstein [...] explained to a colleague, “I do not feel comfortable and at home in any of the ‘isms.’ It always seems to me as though such an ism were strong only so long as it nourishes itself on the weakness of its counter-ism; but if the latter is struck dead, and it is alone on an open field, then it also turns out to be unsteady on its feet”. In this quote, I think, we see the real reason for Einstein's distaste for Copenhagenism: he saw it as a purely negative program, defined only by its rejection of ‘realism’, without anything constructive to say about the latter term.

But just how ‘anti-realist’ was Bohr? He had, after all, consistently maintained that atoms were real, despite their not being directly observable to the senses [...] Bohr’s ‘realist’ tendencies often get overlooked ... Would Bohr really have disowned his intellectual descendants, if he’d known how boldly they now sought to make positive claims about ‘reality’? (MORE - details)
Reply
#2
Thumbs Up  Ostronomos Offline
Angel
(Apr 8, 2025 07:00 PM)C C Wrote: Einstein vs Bohr: Quantum reality is still up for grabs
https://iai.tv/articles/einstein-vs-bohr..._auid=2020

INTRO: For decades, the story went that Bohr’s anti-realism triumphed over Einstein’s quest for a deeper reality. Physicists were told to "shut up and calculate" and metaphysical debates were dismissed as distractions. But today, realist interpretations of quantum mechanics constantly emerge and the anti-realist position is far from the mainstream – so if Bohr won, why does almost no one take his side? University of Massachusetts Boston physicist Jacques Pienaar argues that we’ve been wrong all along – Bohr was not an anti-realist after all, and Einstein's apparent realism is not on sure-footing... (MORE - details)
Reply
#3
Magical Realist Online
Quote:"In a curious way, looking back on their debates, I think Bohr and Einstein were aligned in that they both wanted an interpretation of quantum mechanics that would be constructive and fertile, opening new avenues for exploration. But for Einstein that meant being bold enough to make some positive claim about reality; whereas for Bohr it meant following Schrödinger’s advice and holding off a little longer, waiting for new ideas and new language to be invented that could properly express the lesson of the quantum. Against Einstein’s ‘realism’, then, Bohr was not after all offering an ‘anti-realism’, but rather a ‘postponed realism’. A view that recognized that quantum theory was not a finished project, but rather, to borrow Schrödinger's words, “a stimulus and a signpost to further quest”.

This prematurity of the realist view compared to the "let's wait and see" approach of the pragmatist can be illustrated by two people looking thru a kaleidoscope. The realist looks into it and sees a beautiful and symmetrical pattern in which all the colored jewels line up and radiate from a common center. He tells the other guy, "There. We have it. The theory is complete." The pragmatist then takes the kaleidoscope and looks into it, slowly twisting it and seeing the pattern change. "No..We do not have the whole picture yet. More exploration is required."

"It from bit. Otherwise put, every it — every particle, every field of force, even the spacetime continuum itself — derives its function, its meaning, its very existence entirely — even if in some contexts indirectly — from the apparatus elicited answers to yes or no questions, binary choices, bits. It from bit symbolizes the idea that every item of the physical world has at bottom — at a very deep bottom, in most instances — an immaterial source and explanation; that what we call reality arises in the last analysis from the posing of yes-no questions and the registering of equipment-evoked responses; in short, that all things physical are information-theoretic in origin and this is a participatory universe."---John Wheeler, https://historyofinformation.com/detail.php?id=5041
Reply
#4
Ostronomos Offline
Anti-realism seems to stand on sure-footing, to put it bluntly. However, realism is on the decline. Such a view aligns with my vision of a future in which humanity is united under one God.
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Reality is a quantum-level event Ostronomos 5 1,051 Apr 6, 2025 03:29 PM
Last Post: Ostronomos
  Article Galileo, Einstein, and the unexpected origins of relativity (philosophy of science) C C 0 544 Mar 21, 2025 03:56 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article Philosophy behind recent quantum chip breakthrough + 3 styles of curiosity C C 0 677 Feb 25, 2025 06:42 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article Incompleteness of science + Reality goes beyond physics + Qualia quietism manifesto C C 5 1,047 Jan 16, 2025 09:13 PM
Last Post: Ostronomos
  Did Einstein establish the beginnings of a metaphysics? Ostronomos 1 502 Oct 7, 2024 12:47 AM
Last Post: stryder
  Article "Science does not describe reality" (philosophy of science) C C 2 711 Feb 1, 2024 02:30 AM
Last Post: confused2
  Article Faith-based beliefs are inescapable in science (philosophy of science) C C 3 745 Jul 1, 2023 12:44 AM
Last Post: Magical Realist
  Quantum Theory and the Reality Self-Simulation Hypothesis Ostronomos 0 355 Jun 17, 2023 09:38 PM
Last Post: Ostronomos
  Article The myth of value-free science + Science & ideology (philososphy of science) C C 0 380 May 22, 2023 02:10 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article What is life? Scientists still can’t agree. (philosophy of biology) C C 1 427 Mar 21, 2023 07:54 PM
Last Post: Magical Realist



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)