The following two quotes don't seem to be in agreement to me.
You keep returning to the mind as the actuator for wave collapse of which I've already said I don't personally believe this to be the case other than a loosely coupled relationship.
What do you mean by a loosely coupled relationship?
Interesting, I wonder what observation took place to know or understand the interaction of radium with mica in the Earth's crust? It's as if he's trying to say that human consciousness has never observed this interaction that we somehow know about?
So which is it? Do you state that consciousness is a necessary ingredient to the collapse of a wave function or not? It is a trivial tautology that someone has to observe it before we are aware of it. That is different then being the cause of a collapse of a wave function.
This is hardly a good characterization of the observed phenomena in QM. Are you implying that the experimentation is faulty? Are you implying the the fundamental principle of superposition that we observe in the two slit experiment as well as others is incorrect? I'd love to hear about it. Honestly.
I know, wikipedia, feel free to correct them won't you?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observer_ ... physics%29In science, the term observer effect refers to changes that the act of observation will make on a phenomenon being observed. This is often the result of instruments that, by necessity, alter the state of what they measure in some manner. A commonplace example is checking the pressure in an automobile tire; this is difficult to do without letting out some of the air, thus changing the pressure. This effect can be observed in many domains of physics and can often be reduced to insignificance by using better instruments or observation techniques.
In quantum mechanics, there is a common misconception (which has acquired a life of its own, giving rise to endless speculations) that it is the mind of a conscious observer that affects the observer effect in quantum processes. It is rooted in a basic misunderstanding of the meaning of the quantum wave function ψ and the quantum measurement process.[1]
According to standard quantum mechanics, however, it is a matter of complete indifference whether the experimenters stay around to watch their experiment, or leave the room and delegate observing to an inanimate apparatus, instead, which amplifies the microscopic events to macroscopic[2] measurements and records them by a time-irreversible process.[3] The measured state is not interfering with the states excluded by the measurement.
As Richard Feynman put it: "Nature does not know what you are looking at, and she behaves the way she is going to behave whether you bother to take down the data or not."
When discussing the wave function ψ which describes the state of a system in quantum mechanics, one should be cautious of a common misconception that assumes that the wave function ψ amounts to the same thing as the physical object it describes. This flawed concept must then require existence of an external mechanism, such as the mind of a conscious observer, that lies outside the principles governing the time evolution of the wave function ψ, in order to account for the so-called "collapse of the wave function" after a measurement has been performed. But the wave function ψ is not a physical object like, for example, an atom, which has an observable mass, charge and spin, as well as internal degrees of freedom. Instead, ψ is an abstract mathematical function that contains all the statistical information that an observer can obtain from measurements of a given system. In this case, there is no real mystery that mathematical form of the wave function ψ must change abruptly after a measurement has been performed.[1]
http://cosmology.com/Consciousness139.htmlAgain superposition suggests that this particle may be existing in all theoretical states until an actuator forces it to one specific state.
I gave you a reference in my very first post to you that removes this mystery of QM. Did you bother to look it over? Are you familiar with QFT? The "probability states" of ordinary QM become the virtual particles in QFT which really aren't virtual at all but are disturbances of fields.
Going back 2 million years would have no affect on this as time and space don't apply in QM.
What!? Have you read anything about decoherence at all? Seems quantum computers should be a snap to build then.
In quantum mechanics, quantum decoherence is the loss of coherence or ordering of the phase angles between the components of a system in a quantum superposition. One consequence of this dephasing is classical or probabilistically additive behavior. Decoherence occurs when a system interacts with its environment in a thermodynamically irreversible way. This prevents different elements in the quantum superposition of the total system's wavefunction from interfering with each other. Decoherence was first introduced in 1970 by the German physicist H. Dieter Zeh and has been a subject of active research since the 1980s.[1]
Decoherence can be viewed as the loss of information from a system into the environment (often modeled as a heat bath),[2] since every system is loosely coupled with the energetic state of its surroundings. Viewed in isolation, the system's dynamics are non-unitary (although the combined system plus environment evolves in a unitary fashion).[3] Thus the dynamics of the system alone are irreversible. As with any coupling, entanglements are generated between the system and environment. These have the effect of sharing quantum information with—or transferring it to—the surroundings.
Decoherence does not generate actual wave function collapse. It only provides an explanation for the observation of wave function collapse, as the quantum nature of the system "leaks" into the environment. That is, components of the wavefunction are decoupled from a coherent system, and acquire phases from their immediate surroundings. A total superposition of the global or universal wavefunction still exists (and remains coherent at the global level), but its ultimate fate remains an interpretational issue.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_decoherence
Here's an anology. You have a Yatzee cup with dice and give them a shake and a roll onto a table. While in the cup the dice exist in a superposition of possible states anyone of which might be actualized when the dice hit the table. Of course without someone to shake the cup and toss out the dice onto a table we will not get an outcome.
Can the cup be overturned by a passing cat or a strong gust of wind? Yes, but for us to get an outcome we have to shake the cup.
Regardless of the state of evolution on the Earth, we can't prove that no consciousness was observing or measuring this evolution.
Hence the warning by Feynman about going down the drain. So freely wandering disembodied minds that at some point found they could possess certain products of evolution?
This theory makes no claims that consciousness or some other outside force controls or changes the chemistry in the mind violating any known physical laws, but rather, it is the fundamental building blocks for those laws and insures that they exist and function as we observe them.
So this means the laws of chemistry are followed for the brain chemistry. If those laws remain inviolate then there is no difference between what the next state of the brain is according to chemistry regardless of mind collapsing wave functions. But given that you stated you don't accept this idea anyhow what exactly are you arguing for by idealism? It has a lot a variations. It might help if you clarified what it is you are arguing for here. So the problem I raised early for dualism still remains. How can anything other than the chemistry of the brain control the body unless it violates the laws of chemistry to effect a different outcome? QM results in the laws of chemistry not in their violation.
And besides, the collapsing of a wave function is restricted to very narrow possibilities. You get this eigenstate or some other. You can't get whatever you imagine. And it has to occur in a manner to support a certain limited probability range of outcomes with repeated runs.
And the ability to observe and measure anything in our universe only has meaning when interacting with consciousness.
For us, yes. This is not very deep. We are trapped inside our consciousness.
And to take this one step further, to imagine a universe without consciousness is an ABSTRACT FUNCTION OF CONSCIOUSNESS.
Another "deep" tautological statement. There is nothing "that it is like" to be dead, however.
This idea doesn't prove that consciousness is the actuator but it's worth exploring these relationships in order to fully understand why matter behaves the way it does.
Good news! Scientists have been busy doing just that. Have you heard of the LHC and the standard model?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wld0fHk9WFw
Kolob’s set time is “one thousand years according to the time appointed unto that whereon thou standest” (Abraham 3:4). I take this as a round number. - Gee