Instantaneous long-distance travel of LDS gods

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_Tobin
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Re: Instantaneous long-distance travel of LDS gods

Post by _Tobin »

DrW wrote:
Tobin wrote: I don't have to put up with that and am more than happy to do so.

Pointing out the obvious by using examples from your own writing is not a personal attack.

This is a personal attack:
Tobin wrote:That is why DrW is full of gas.


I don't think that is nearly the same thing and you know it. When I characterize your opinions like that, they are not direct attacks on your person. Certainly when I express my opinion of your views and think it is so much hot air (or that you are full of gas), or they are silly or you are not stating something accurately - that is fair game. Especially when I take the time to point out flaws in your positions and WHY I think they are silly or full of gas. I certainly don't try to misrepresent your positions (and I usually fully quote your views) as you do me, or attack you personally.
"You lack vision, but I see a place where people get on and off the freeway. On and off, off and on all day, all night.... Tire salons, automobile dealerships and wonderful, wonderful billboards reaching as far as the eye can see. My God, it'll be beautiful." -- Judge Doom
_Tobin
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Re: Instantaneous long-distance travel of LDS gods

Post by _Tobin »

Brad Hudson wrote:
Gadianton wrote:<snip>



1) Causality. I believe Tobin demands causality to equate to strict determinism, and since QM contradicts the strongest expressions of determinism, I'd give a pass here as distinguishing the two isn't obvious and some philosophers may even argue that they can't be distinguished. But unfortunately, he brought retro-causation into the discussion and argued passionately for it, however, misunderstanding the idea, along with all the experiments associated with the idea that he has studied, to mean "randomness", but such randomness if it undermines causality, also undermines retro-causality, and all the theoretical propositions for retro-causality "backward in time" suggestions that have been made to fill in theoretical gaps, propositions that could one day be exploited for superluminal communication, time travel, etc. In other words, Tobin must pick between belief in retrocausality and it's uses for Gods communicating etc. and QM as pure randomness, which will undermine that possibility.

<snip>



I agree with this. I think the focus on randomness actually detracts from the argument that retrocausality is possible. I think Tobin's argument would be stronger (and more interesting) if he set that aside and focussed on the potential for retrocausation.

But, heck, it's his argument. :wink:


Actually, I'm not strict about causation in any direction at all as that would be unlikely in the QM world. I only brought up retro-causality to demonstrate there are a number of views as to varied and unusual results seen in Quantum Mechanics. I certainly don't know if the view is right, since it was mainly used as a convenience to solve certain difficulties encountered and as far as I know is still only theoretically possible at this time. Until someone devises an experiment to demonstrate whether or not anti-matter is really particles moving backwards through time, it will remain like that. At this point, I believe much of what I've pointed out remains theoretical and I don't think causality can or should be used as a valid reason to say they are impossible. Certainly, if someone at some point demonstrates that such things are possible, then what?!? I seriously doubt the universe will disappear because we discover more paradoxes or weird results.
"You lack vision, but I see a place where people get on and off the freeway. On and off, off and on all day, all night.... Tire salons, automobile dealerships and wonderful, wonderful billboards reaching as far as the eye can see. My God, it'll be beautiful." -- Judge Doom
_DrW
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Re: Instantaneous long-distance travel of LDS gods

Post by _DrW »

Gadianton wrote:Long story short for now due to time. Some good input here from others. Anyway, I think I see two issues more clearly from Tobin's angle.

1) Causality. I believe Tobin demands causality to equate to strict determinism, and since QM contradicts the strongest expressions of determinism, I'd give a pass here as distinguishing the two isn't obvious and some philosophers may even argue that they can't be distinguished. But unfortunately, he brought retro-causation into the discussion and argued passionately for it, however, misunderstanding the idea, along with all the experiments associated with the idea that he has studied, to mean "randomness", but such randomness if it undermines causality, also undermines retro-causality, and all the theoretical propositions for retro-causality "backward in time" suggestions that have been made to fill in theoretical gaps, propositions that could one day be exploited for superluminal communication, time travel, etc. In other words, Tobin must pick between belief in retrocausality and it's uses for Gods communicating etc. and QM as pure randomness, which will undermine that possibility.

2) On the macro world. Tobin's example of the cat experiment where the radioactive material kills a dog rather than a cat, I think what he's saying that "there's a tiny quantum probability that the cat disappeared from the box and a dog appeared" or that a ball rolls uphill was the other example. The waveform of a dog could be defracted through a slit, right? Well, If I recall correctly, a small, green physics book a friend of mine at college had for his QM class had a childish drawing on the first page of a guy in a car in front of his closed garage (I think) and stated that if he ran into the garage door enough times, there is a probability he'd pop right into his garage. Well, this idea doesn't have anything to do with the pros and cons for superluminal communication or people exploiting QM for the macro world, but I think is what Tobin is refering to when arguing for one consistent rules where only QM applies, and this further hooks into his ideas about QM as randomness. If others have thoughts here, i'd like to hear them. I've got to get going, but will work up a response in the back of my mind in the mean time.

sorry tobin, didn't mean to reference you as a third party, I'm pressed for time and thisi is just how it came out trying to pack it all in a couple points.


These kinds of examples used to abound (e.g. tennis balls passing through walls after enough collisions, glasses falling through table tops, etc.)

The car driving against the garage door makes a very poor example with which to illustrate the probabilistic or statistical nature of QM phenomenon. The larger the colliding cross section of the objects, and the larger the objects themselves, the lower the probability of passage (or escape).

Tunneling electrons make good objects for observing QM interactions, because they are small objects (essentially point objects) confronted by small potential wells from which to escape.

In fact, the car will never magically appear on the other side of the garage door without substantial physical interaction with it, as in a broken garage door and dented car. I doubt that you will find such examples used any more, even in elementary texts.

To see why this is, one need only look at what would be required according to any of the current QM interpretations, or models, of which there are more than half a dozen. Here are a few of them:

- The Copenhagen interpretation (the one usually taught in Physics 101);
- The Many Worlds interpretation,
- The Objective Collapse group of interpretations (which is a broader class derived from the Copenhagen interpretation and includes at least three variants),
- The Transactional Interpretation, which is the one that Tobin is probably trying to refer to when he talks about equations that work going forward or backward in time (this is also sometimes referred to as a standing wave interpretation)
- Pilot Wave or DeBroglie-Bohm Interpretation: another model based on the Schroedinger Equation, and one with some good explanatory power.
- Ensemble or Statistical interpretation. This is not a very philosophical interpretation; it just lets one calculate the probabilities of the outcomes for systems as ensembles. (In this interpretation the probability of a dead cat when one opens the box is simply the probability of finding a dead cat in any given box if the outcomes of many Schroedinger cat experiments - an ensemble - were observed and recorded.)

Have to get back to work but will do a ROM calculation and post it later of the probability that a car will pass though a garage door without damage to the car or the door. The chances against will be exceedingly high.
_________________________

ETA: If Tobin likes quantum mechanics to describe what he believes God can do, he might be interested in what a statistical mechanics kind of approach yields in terms of the probability that God, as described by Christianity and especially Mormonism, actually exists. Again, the probability is exceedingly low.
Last edited by Guest on Fri Nov 16, 2012 6:32 am, edited 1 time in total.
David Hume: "---Mistakes in philosophy are merely ridiculous, those in religion are dangerous."

DrW: "Mistakes in science are learning opportunities and are eventually corrected."
_Gunnar
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Re: Instantaneous long-distance travel of LDS gods

Post by _Gunnar »

Tobin wrote:Actually, I'm not strict about causation in any direction at all as that would be unlikely in the QM world. I only brought up retro-causality to demonstrate there are a number of views as to varied and unusual results seen in Quantum Mechanics. I certainly don't know if the view is right, since it was mainly used as a convenience to solve certain difficulties encountered and as far as I know is still only theoretically possible at this time. Until someone devises an experiment to demonstrate whether or not anti-matter is really particles moving backwards through time, it will remain like that. At this point, I believe much of what I've pointed out remains theoretical and I don't think causality can or should be used as a valid reason to say they are impossible. Certainly, if someone at some point demonstrates that such things are possible, then what?!? I seriously doubt the universe will disappear because we discover more paradoxes or weird results.

Hi Tobin!

I really don't have anything to add to this thread, and I hope that this comment will not be regarded as a "derailment", but I just wanted you and everyone to know that I feel that, to a large extent, I have unfairly misjudged you. You are far from the rabid, anti-science religious fanatic I at first thought you to be. I still don't agree with you that the religious faith approach to knowledge is in any way reliable, or think it likely that your "encounter with God" was any more than a vivid hallucination of some kind (though you likely believe it to be real), but it has become apparent to me that you respect the work and findings of science to a large extent, and make a genuine attempt to understand them. For example: you don't try to dismiss out of hand the evidence supporting evolution and the great age of the earth, or try to pretend that there is no overwhelming evidence against Noah's Flood. I want you to know that I respect and honor you for that.

Peace,

Gunnar
No precept or claim is more likely to be false than one that can only be supported by invoking the claim of Divine authority for it--no matter who or what claims such authority.

“If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; but if you really make them think, they'll hate you.”
― Harlan Ellison
_Gadianton
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Re: Instantaneous long-distance travel of LDS gods

Post by _Gadianton »

I hope to see the results of your calculation posted here, Dr. W. In the mean time, I'll be wondering if the number you provide predicts a single object the size of a grape to pass through an inch thick barrier once over the lifespan of our universe. If the odds are substantially against such an event from happening, then I think it would be strange to say that the macro world is governed by the "randomness" of quantum mechanics. Calling cause and effect an illusion that happens by sheer chance, under Tobin's definitions, when every observation made outside QM has behaved as if such a principle holds and not even theory grants much of a chance to such a thing ever happening, would be a bit extreme. Not even in the movie Event Horizon, where the crew of a spaceship entered a dimension of pure chaos, where quantum uncertainty brought apparitions from the dead to haunt the crew and nightmares became real, was there really a serious element of randomness and chaos.
_Philo Sofee
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Re: Instantaneous long-distance travel of LDS gods

Post by _Philo Sofee »

I finished Victor J. Stenger's book "Has Science Found God?" and he demonstrates without any question that God cannot possibly fit into the universe via Quantum Mechanics. A very powerful read. His book "Quantum Gods" is also very necessary reading to see just what the Quantum can and cannot be used to do. The silliness these days by New Age idiots and religious thinking dolts concerning the Quantum is entirely phony and unbelievable.
Dr CamNC4Me
"Dr. Peterson and his Callithumpian cabal of BYU idiots have been marginalized by their own inevitable irrelevancy defending a fraud."
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