355 | Solo: Looking Quantum Mechanics in the Eyeball

One of the major obstacles to understanding quantum mechanics is the difficulty we have in simply accepting what the theory itself is telling us. The problem is that we know what the everyday world looks like -- stuff, arranged in space, evolving through time. So we can't resist the temptation to impose that picture on the quantum description, even if it's not actually there. In this solo episode I talk about what it means to take quantum mechanics at face value, and the difficult work involved in understanding how the everyday world of our experience fits into the picture.

austere

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Here is the survey on physicists' opinions about unsettled big-picture questions:

And here is a short technical overview on the ideas described in this episode:

If you want further papers, look at the papers cited in this one.

5 thoughts on “355 | Solo: Looking Quantum Mechanics in the Eyeball”

  1. Michel Nizette

    The emergence of space from the entanglement structure of a wavefunction is a quite intriguing notion. But it would appear to put time and space on very different footings, with time seemingly having a kind of absolute, axiomatic role in the theory. How would Lorentz invariance, and the kind of blending of space and time that it entails, emerge from this? And would this mean that there would be a (possibly unobservable) preferred direction in spacetime, aligned with that fundamental time?

  2. Perhaps the easiest way to describe the difference between the 2 most popular interpretations of quantum mechanics, Copenhagen and Many-Worlds, is in how they explain the double-slit experiment.
    According to the Copenhagen Interpretation before you look the particle is in a superposition- a cloud of possibilities. It doesn’t have a definite path. It behaves like a wave and goes through both slits at once as a probability wave, not as a physical object. The wave-like possibilities interfere with each other resulting in an interference pattern at the viewing screen.
    If you should measure which slit it goes through the measurement collapses the wavefunction into one definite path and no interference pattern appears.
    Simple metaphor: Reality is blurry until you look. Looking forces the particle to “make up its mind”.
    According to the Many-Worlds Interpretation, the particle’s wavefunction is real and never collapses. At the slits the universe splits into branches:
    o In one branch, the particle goes through the left slit.
    o In another branch, it goes through the right slit.
    The branches interfere with each other because they are still connected (coherent).
    When you measure which slit it goes through your measuring device also branches. The branches become separate and can no longer interfere, so the interference pattern disappears.
    Simple metaphor: The particle doesn’t choose a path – “The universe splits”, and both paths happen in parallel worlds.
    The simplest possible summary
    o Copenhagen: The world is uncertain until you look. Measurement creates a single outcome.
    o Many-Worlds: All outcomes happen in parallel. Measurement just tells you which branch you’re in.
    Ref: Microsoft Copilot

  3. The foundations of QM are addressed most cogently by Karen Barad in her book Meeting The Universe Halfway. Her approach is called agential realism. Very many overlaps with yours, Sean, so it’d be great if you could interview her!

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