Does Quantum Mechanics Imply Multiple Universes?

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  • čas přidán 16. 05. 2024
  • Dive into the deepest quantum mystery: how do we transition from a haze of possibilities to the concrete reality we experience? Does the answer require a profusion of universes, each shaped by different quantum outcomes?
    This program is part of the Big Ideas series, supported by the John Templeton Foundation.
    Participants:
    Sean Carroll
    Moderator:
    Brian Greene
    00:00 - Introduction
    03:38 - Sean Carroll Introduction
    04:09 - The Quantum Measurement Problem
    08:33 - The GRW Theory
    11:18 - What would be predicted with the Schrödinger equation?
    15:10 - Many Worlds Theory
    17:42 - What are the implications of the many worlds theory?
    22:37 - Quantum Entanglement
    29:05 - What does the future of Quantum Mechanics look like?
    31:26 - Embracing the Many Worlds Concept
    Part 1 | Can Particles be Quantum Entangled Across Time? • Can Particles be Quant...
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Komentáře • 525

  • @lonelycubicle
    @lonelycubicle Před 15 dny +74

    So nice to hear an expert of a field be interviewed by another expert of the same field who is just trying to get the information out for the audience.

    • @tomsmith4542
      @tomsmith4542 Před 15 dny

      yes but the difference is that Brian has also journalist qualities

    • @philharmer198
      @philharmer198 Před 6 dny

      What do other experts , in the same field think .

  • @Witnessdomaining
    @Witnessdomaining Před 14 dny +21

    Brian Greene and Sean Carroll... What a meditation!

    • @philharmer198
      @philharmer198 Před 10 dny

      You come up with nonsense . Upon this meditation , mindset .

  • @danielpaulson8838
    @danielpaulson8838 Před 14 dny +33

    This was way too short. I could listen to these two dialogue all day. Incredible communicators and teachers, both in very similar ways. They make the complex, somewhat approachable.

    • @maconcamp472
      @maconcamp472 Před dnem

      Gravity is memory!! 🐘
      Gravity reflects our thoughts!!💭
      A black hole is a thought!!💭
      We’re thoughts of the universe!! Moons are like black holes!! 🕳️ We’re becoming powerful stars!!⭐️
      I know I’m dreaming!! 🛌
      If you’re dreaming too, then you’re the conductor of your dream. You have to imagine the best you can, what your dream is all about. ✍️
      I can help you!! 👼 All the galaxies are meant to gravitate to each other, as we would to each other!! Magnetism!! 🧲
      Like a parachute of stars!!🪂 Andromeda galaxy would represent the Milky Way’s twin flame!!🔥 🔥
      Galaxy collisions!! Twin flame connections!! Quantum entanglement!! 👻 We’re more like holograms here and ghosts!! Pretending to be human!! We’re playing a very silly game!!🥸
      We come here as a moon or seed!! We evolve into the universe itself and explode like a star!!💫 I’ve already exploded at least once. I’m trying to help others now!! 😇

  • @JoyoSnooze
    @JoyoSnooze Před 15 dny +24

    Two expert communicators of physics sitting down for a chat.
    Thanks for this.

  • @Dr10Jeeps
    @Dr10Jeeps Před 15 dny +27

    Two of my favourite physicists having their typically enlightening conversation. How can you not be enthralled by this stuff?

  • @richsw
    @richsw Před 12 dny +5

    Goodness, this conversation and the previous one with Elise, was so enjoyable. It almost restores my faith in humanity that two, or three, people can sit down and talk about such incredibly esoteric things in such a beautiful and companionable way.
    The presentation was top quality as was Brian's insights as the host.
    Thank you for providing it for our genuine viewing pleasure.

  • @ulysissira9808
    @ulysissira9808 Před 15 dny +5

    Wow thank you so much great proud of you sir..

  • @SandipChitale
    @SandipChitale Před 15 dny +11

    At 6:12 Brian talks about "Shut up and calculate" dogma that basically discouraged scientists to look at the problem of measurement in QM. And in fact that problem is glossed over in the Physics text books as Sean later mentioned (at 8:00). I think this should be unacceptable in science. And IMO this has been a serious sociological issue that basically was skipped over by the science community. Sean laments about this at 30:49. We may have missed the next Einstein during that period who could have solved it. The lesson is that scientific community should never again ever allow such dogmas of not asking the "why?" questions to take hold. Luckily many scientists (like Sean) and Philosophers (like Tim Maudlin and David Albert) now reject the "shut up and calculate" dogma and press on to try to solve the measurement problem. They should be extremely lauded.
    BTW the "Shut up and calculate" dogma took hold because Neils Bohr and Copenhagen Interpretation wing won the PR battle against Einstein and Schrodinger. Read all about it in Adam Baker's book "What is real?"
    I feel that the same effect is happening in the area of understanding of consciousness research due to the so-called "Hard problem of consciousness" dogma due to David Chalmers. Just like "Shut up and calculate" dogma was rejected, so should the "Hard problem of consciousness" dogma be rejected. Luckily many scientists (like Anil Seth and Michael Graziano) and Philosophers (like Daniel Dennett (did :( )) reject the "Hard problem of consciousness" dogma and press on to try to solve the understanding of consciousness. They should be extremely lauded.

    • @Fomites
      @Fomites Před 15 dny +2

      Well written. Thank you 😊

    • @POTAT-pi7mu
      @POTAT-pi7mu Před 15 dny +2

      Well said.

    • @davidfiler7439
      @davidfiler7439 Před 15 dny +1

      Carry on then and I shall look forward to hearing of your discoveries with eager anticipation.

    • @SandipChitale
      @SandipChitale Před 15 dny +2

      Thanks.Actually I do not work on discoveries myself, but like you I am looking forward to the discoveries made by scientists eagerly.

    • @POTAT-pi7mu
      @POTAT-pi7mu Před 15 dny

      @@davidfiler7439 his comment is thoughtful and considered - you're being a pathetic jerk

  • @fatimapereira781
    @fatimapereira781 Před 15 dny +3

    Ouvir Sean Carroll é sempre um prazer!
    Um dos meus mais preferido e um "grande" comunicador.

  • @shikhauppal6250
    @shikhauppal6250 Před 8 dny +2

    Quantum mechanics was ignored in the 20th century and the same is happening now but it's just so good to hear that people are considering this

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 8 dny +1

      Did you pull that bs out of your own rear or did it come from somebody else? ;-)

    • @maconcamp472
      @maconcamp472 Před dnem

      Gravity is memory!! 🐘
      Gravity reflects our thoughts!!💭
      A black hole is a thought!!💭
      We’re thoughts of the universe!! Moons are like black holes!! 🕳️ We’re becoming powerful stars!!⭐️
      I know I’m dreaming!! 🛌
      If you’re dreaming too, then you’re the conductor of your dream. You have to imagine the best you can, what your dream is all about. ✍️
      I can help you!! 👼 All the galaxies are meant to gravitate to each other, as we would to each other!! Magnetism!! 🧲
      Like a parachute of stars!!🪂 Andromeda galaxy would represent the Milky Way’s twin flame!!🔥 🔥
      Galaxy collisions!! Twin flame connections!! Quantum entanglement!! 👻 We’re more like holograms here and ghosts!! Pretending to be human!! We’re playing a very silly game!!🥸
      We come here as a moon or seed!! We evolve into the universe itself and explode like a star!!💫 I’ve already exploded at least once. I’m trying to help others now!! 😇

  • @robinette64
    @robinette64 Před 15 dny +18

    My 2 favorite physicists!!!

  • @williamstearns4581
    @williamstearns4581 Před 15 dny +2

    Great salon thank you very much I enjoyed it.

  • @josephbunverzagt9535
    @josephbunverzagt9535 Před 15 dny +6

    I would love to sit down with these 2 guys, have a drink, and talk physics. How cool would that be.🥃

  • @yaserthe1
    @yaserthe1 Před 15 dny +25

    OMG
    My 2 favourite dudes
    This is like a Marvel DC crossover!😂

    • @coder-x7440
      @coder-x7440 Před 15 dny +2

      Spider-Man, ..Batman. Batman, meet Spiderman.

    • @stephengee4182
      @stephengee4182 Před 13 dny +1

      Carroll was scientific advisor to many of the marvel many universe movies.

  • @genedussell5528
    @genedussell5528 Před 15 dny +1

    i am sooo glad these 2 physicist are finally together talking. love them both!

    • @michaelmurphree593
      @michaelmurphree593 Před 4 dny

      Sean also has a Mindscape episode where Brian is the guest. Definitely worth a listen.

  • @alpachino2shae
    @alpachino2shae Před 15 dny +5

    Gotta love Sean’s shirts 👌

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas Před 15 dny +1

    one of the best interviews for a long time, penrose and carroll are both very special science fellas. thanks.

    • @stashmark7105
      @stashmark7105 Před 5 dny

      Yes i love when two genius ladies as these can come together to tell the truth about the true nature of reality.

  • @arthurcamargo8416
    @arthurcamargo8416 Před 3 dny

    Another fantastic session! Thank you!

  • @rarabbb
    @rarabbb Před 15 dny +6

    I would just like to say a massive thank you to everyone involved in this production and freely giving us these interesting discussions.❤

  • @m0rph3u5.
    @m0rph3u5. Před 10 dny

    Very interesting interview .. This channel is priceless and Brian's presentation and hosting are Phenomenal.
    P.S. Brian's smile was in a superposition until Sean measured it @ 12:44 :D

  • @jayanderson66
    @jayanderson66 Před 15 dny +4

    I believe that all the work on decoherence and work on quantum computing will lead to getting everyone on better footing in quantam mechanics.

  • @jamesdunham1072
    @jamesdunham1072 Před 15 dny

    Sean seems to always ask the right questions in a very appropriate fashion....

  • @hopperpeace
    @hopperpeace Před 15 dny +13

    Sean Carroll and Joseph M. Gaßner are my favorite physics communicators.

  • @ToXllCMuSllC
    @ToXllCMuSllC Před dnem +1

    General relativity and quantum mechanics will never be combined until we realize that they take place at different
    moments in time. Because causality has a speed limit(c)
    every point in space where you observe it from will be the closest to the present moment. When we look out into
    the universe, we see the past which is made of particles
    (GR). When we try to look at smaller and smaller sizes and
    distances, we are actually looking closer and closer to the present moment (QM). The wave property of particles appears
    when we start looking into the future of that particle. It is a probability wave because the future is probabilistic.
    Wave function collapse happens when we bring a particle into the
    present/past. GR is making measurements in the predictable
    past. QM is trying to make measurements of the probabilistic future

  • @neutrino7892
    @neutrino7892 Před 14 dny

    Brilliant talk. thx

  • @dinarwali386
    @dinarwali386 Před 12 dny

    Quantum Mechanics is the probably the ultimate sophistication in Physics or perhaps in reality. Great conversation.

  • @yuriimarshalofficial
    @yuriimarshalofficial Před 15 dny

    Exactly, we never fool ourselves like in the case of experiments where we use "observations", because essentially we stress the waves to the compact corpuscle to measure speed, distance, size, inner properties, which means coercion rather than distant sightsee. In fact we tear out fermionic entities from another state of essences and call it some kind of Standard Model of particle physics, but fundamentally miss the nature of categorised phenomenons, e.g. comparing bosons with fermions while they exist in different states of essences (informational or probability continuum vs time-energy continuum of states).

  • @Edgarbopp
    @Edgarbopp Před 11 dny

    Sean Carroll’s podcast is the best.

  • @afifakimih8823
    @afifakimih8823 Před 14 dny

    Two of My favourite physics communicator/ physicist...💜❤️

  • @SG-kj2uy
    @SG-kj2uy Před 15 dny +1

    Sean is the best!!

  • @JohnDarwin7
    @JohnDarwin7 Před 15 dny

    Thank you Sean.🖖

  • @sangeet9100
    @sangeet9100 Před 14 dny

    About the EM theory having been seamlessly embedded in QM, right away while gravity is still outlier - scale of QM is in the realm of particle physics, and atomic particles prominently display electric charge and/or magnetic moment, making it an "automatic" fit, whereas gravity has been on a much larger scale (I don't know much about quantum gravity concepts). Maybe while trying to quantize gravity, one could also approach the task from the possibility of EM as some sort of space-time distortion

  • @keppela1
    @keppela1 Před 15 dny +4

    Brian: "If some outcomes are probabilistically unlikely, why do they ALL happen in many worlds?" What a great question. I wish Sean had given a comprehensible answer.

    • @7heHorror
      @7heHorror Před 15 dny +5

      The glib answer is that's what the math says. 😉Sean said the probabilities are expressed as the likelihood you will find yourself in whichever world, addressing a common criticism of many-worlds, but perhaps not fully answering the question as posed. The rest of the answer, as I've heard him describe elsewhere, is that worlds resulting from outcomes with low probabilities occupy less of Hilbert space than worlds resulting from high probability outcomes.

    • @Kwarktaschnir
      @Kwarktaschnir Před 15 dny +6

      If you are interested in the argument: On episode 36 of the Mindscape Podcast and on episode 106 of the Robinson Podcast Sean Carroll discusses the problem of probability in the Everett interpretation with David Albert at length.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 15 dny

      MWI is trivial bullshit. You don't have to think any further about it. We know exactly where Everett went wrong.

    • @keppela1
      @keppela1 Před 14 dny +1

      @@7heHorror Oh interesting. I wish he'd said that! It's nice to know that the lower probability translates into some type of consequence. Thanks much.

    • @keppela1
      @keppela1 Před 14 dny +1

      @@Kwarktaschnir Thanks, I'll check those out.

  • @coder-x7440
    @coder-x7440 Před 15 dny

    I LOVE THIIIIS!!!! Sean Carol and Brian Greene shootin the breeze 😎🍹🌴🏖️

  • @niranjansaikia9379
    @niranjansaikia9379 Před 13 dny

    Quantum Reality is Magic Reality..happy to see both of you on this mind boggling topic..I love both of you..Thanks a lot..❤❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉😊

  • @tresajessygeorge210
    @tresajessygeorge210 Před 15 dny

    THANK YOU...!!!

  • @Pandaemoni
    @Pandaemoni Před 13 dny

    That was a nice explanation of Everett's idea. I had always imagined it as saying that each measurement was "generating" (in some sense) new universes, but I find it a lot more comprehensible to me, humble researcher, that I am simply being drawn into a superposition with the particle I am trying to measure, preserving the outcomes I was expecting to see. That gives me metaphysical agita, making me wonder what I mean by "me" as it maybe I am just a mathematical object (and then add the holographic principle to that), but my philosophical discomfort isn't evidence against it.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 10 dny

      A better explanation of Everett's idea would be the fact that his thesis was already wrong in the second sentence. ;-)

  • @gravityalchemist6599

    I'm using equal and opposite spin for the Spin Propusion Gyral Motor.

  • @vanikaghajanyan7760
    @vanikaghajanyan7760 Před 15 dny +1

    28:40 On spontaneous Lorentz transformations:
    the asymmetry of time actually implies the accumulation of time, more precisely, history, variety, aging.
    Instead of the Copenhagen and/or multi-world interpretations of quantum mechanics, the presence of spontaneous Lorentz transformations seems to be more physical. Thus, the world itself already has many-sided (~ "multi-world") and improvisational (~"probabilistic") properties.
    P.S.
    0. "Indeed, it is clear that we cannot report the translational motion of the entire universe and check whether this motion affects the course of any processes. The principle of relativity therefore has heuristic and physical meanings only if it is valid for any closed system. However, the question arises, when can a system be considered closed? Is the remoteness of all the masses outside the considered system sufficient for this? The answer, according to experience, says that in the case of uniform and rectilinear motion, this is enough, but for other movements it is not enough.
    Summarizing, we can say that the postulate of relativity includes the statement that the uniform and rectilinear motion of the "center of gravity" of the Universe relative to some closed system does not affect the processes in this system." (Pauli, RT).
    1. Obviously, the opposite is true for an expanding universe.
    Apparently, the researcher can detect and measure the effect of the aging process in his own frame of reference caused by the phenomenon of global time t(universe)=1/H:
    ds^ 2=c^2dт^2=g(00)c^ 2dt^2=(1-Ht*)c^2dt^2, where the parameter Ht* it shows how much of the global time has "passed" in its own frame of reference, t* is the measurement time according to the clock of the resting observer, t is the duration of any physical process in its own frame of reference relative to the clock.
    2.The observer can measure the increase in the duration of the processes in the laboratory frame of reference: dт=[√ g(00)]dt=[√(1-Ht*)]dt~(1-Ht*)dt

  • @comtearnau00
    @comtearnau00 Před 15 dny +1

    Good final music

  • @lonelycubicle
    @lonelycubicle Před 15 dny +2

    I didn’t follow Sean’s answer about probability. Need to look that up.

  • @MrMinorKeys
    @MrMinorKeys Před 7 dny

    As always such a pleasure to listen to stimulating insights ideas. So, when we say that energy is conserved, what does that mean in the many worlds were we keep on splitting ourselves exponentially?

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 7 dny

      Nothing. The world does not split endlessly. Everett simply didn't understand quantum mechanics.

  • @jimmydeocadez237
    @jimmydeocadez237 Před 13 dny

    I don't know why even I don't understand anything but I find this kind of physics very fascinating in fact I spend most of my leisure time watching videos like this.

    • @Dr.scottcase88
      @Dr.scottcase88 Před 12 dny +1

      I feel exactly the same way and spend hours listening to Edward Witten’s physics lectures and myriad of other things and often I use them to help me fall asleep not to say that I’m bored with it I find some serenity in my misunderstanding or inability to understand while I keep trying to grasp that understanding. Peace.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 10 dny

      There is nothing to understand here. This was two guys who don't understand physics talking about physics. ;-)

  • @leolopez6341
    @leolopez6341 Před 8 dny

    We will never get tired of you 2

  • @yeti9127
    @yeti9127 Před 14 dny

    I can listen to these guys for hours..

  • @petetap4255
    @petetap4255 Před 15 dny

    Given that multiple particles occupy a space, each with individual waveforms then ,what happens to particles when you include constructive and destructive supposition within the system?

  • @El_Diablo_12
    @El_Diablo_12 Před 2 dny

    19:30 spacetime from a many world’s perspective - early days
    21:20 gravity isn’t a force propagating through spacetime. It’s a feature of spacetime itself

  • @siamakmis
    @siamakmis Před 14 dny

    With do all respect to both legends professor Nassim haramein eloquently explained about these ambiguities in quantum mechanics,,

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 10 dny

      There is no ambiguity in quantum mechanics. There are a lot of people who are just not smart enough to learn enough about it. ;-)

  • @BiswajitBhattacharjee-up8vv

    Humm they have made science significant.
    You have a synergy. Looking forward for superposition to super universe.
    Thank you
    BOTH OF YOU, video.

  • @nicksotiropoulos1469
    @nicksotiropoulos1469 Před 15 dny +3

    It just is that we as humans can't accept that propability rules our reality. However we accept that for dice, coins and cards without asuming many worlds existence. Like we easily accept and understand imaginary numbers in electrical circuits but not in quantum mechanics. Maybe propability and complex numbers themselfs is what we refuse to accept?

    • @heathenhammer2344
      @heathenhammer2344 Před 15 dny

      Probability is ultimately deterministic. It just looks otherwise.

    • @declandougan7243
      @declandougan7243 Před 15 dny

      That’s not what they’re discussing in this video at all.

  • @thomasdequincey5811
    @thomasdequincey5811 Před 6 dny

    I loved the story about Bohm, Einstein and Bell. I hadn't heard it before.

  • @M0U53B41T
    @M0U53B41T Před 15 dny +1

    Are there any plans to include Niel Turok in these discussions by any chance?

  • @Sound_man73_Electronics

    Two of my favorite science educators on the same stage! I have always disagreed with Sean on the 'Many World's Theory', but who the hell am I to judge?

  • @jinstinky501
    @jinstinky501 Před 15 dny +9

    34 mins? Is this 'shrinkflation'? Boohoo. I want more. More free stuff!!!

    • @NakedSageAstrology
      @NakedSageAstrology Před 14 dny +2

      No-thing is free in this Youniverse. 🙏
      Every-thing comes at the cost of the Soul.
      Think deeply about this, this intangible Light that Illuminates This Dream.
      Each act of Observation, each time You look into this MirroR of mind; the ancients called this Maya. -Illusion of the senses.
      Rorri Maesu says useaMirroR
      Say You in reverse and hear 'We', understand this Youniverse is not the 'Me'-niverse BE-Cause that would be too tiny to be Self sustainable.
      Instead this ever expanding Youniverse is akin to looking into the MirroR of the event horizon, forever frozen betwixt Waking, Dreaming & Deep Sleep. All from within You the 4th.
      Say Maya aloud to reveal the Source of The "I AM."
      One verse, many songs.
      Row row row your boat old friend. ⛵ 💤 🌈🙏
      Tat Tvam Asi

  • @1ifemare
    @1ifemare Před 15 dny

    Wow. My 2 favorite science lecturers together debating Foundations of Physics and it's not even my birthday. Get Neil Turok in the same room i'd be in Physics heaven.

  • @user-zf9dv8kg7q
    @user-zf9dv8kg7q Před 15 dny +9

    conciseness

  • @paultvshow
    @paultvshow Před 12 dny

    I have been interested in quantum and studied mechanics since high school and university. Even though I have casually learned quantum mechanics via CZcams and on other platforms, I was not quite able to make sense of it until recently when I started delving deep into quantum computing.

  • @joshsater4044
    @joshsater4044 Před 14 dny

    Great closing statement by Mr. Greene. The universe does not have to bend itself to our intuition and understanding! It may be weirder than our brains are capable of imagining.

  • @exilibrius
    @exilibrius Před 3 dny +1

    The probability thing feels like we miss a dimension to fully predict and observ

  • @jvmbmc
    @jvmbmc Před 15 dny +4

    I know its off topic but as a non scientist I was thinking about entanglement and doesn't that break the speed of light is the fastest since it could if I understand happen instantly across the universe at distances farther than a light year away? Also since could it happen across time then also? Weird stuff, "spooky".

    • @iridium1911
      @iridium1911 Před 15 dny +6

      Entanglement cannot be used to actually transmit any information, therefore causality is not violated. Neither is relativity.

    • @TheDavidlloydjones
      @TheDavidlloydjones Před 15 dny +1

      Easy: in the "real world" the planet Jupiter may be a whole lot of "distance" away -- probably a couple of light-days.
      But that's the mere real world.
      The imaginary planet Jupiter is right here. I've brought it before your eyes *SHAZAM* almost instantly.
      No limitation by and 300,000,000 metres/second for me! My imagination can travel light-years in seconds -- and so can yours. It just did. To Jupiter and back.

    • @peterbabu936
      @peterbabu936 Před 15 dny

      Trivial question, with non trivial answer.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 15 dny

      @@peterbabu936 The answer is a trivial "no". ;-)

    • @declandougan7243
      @declandougan7243 Před 15 dny +1

      @jvmbmc. Think of it this way. We run a similar experiment with human beings. First, you’ll meet up with a friend of yours, and designate by a coin flip who will tell a truth and who will tell a lie. Second, two people agree on a question to ask each of you. Even if you travel to the opposite sides of the world before being questioned, you will still answer the way you agreed to, no instant communication required.
      This is not an exact analogy to entanglement but goes to show that non local behavior doesn’t require faster than light communication.

  • @WideCuriosity
    @WideCuriosity Před 5 dny

    The thing about many worlds that puzzles me is where all the energy to continually split the universe into two, comes from. Surely a better view must be that all versions already exist at once, there are versions of us in some, and while they can imagine a time line joining points, in reality each only experiences their part of a present moment, has a memory of possible others that seem a rational path to where they are, and can envisage possible paths leading away from where they are. No sudden split, it's all there. Time and space merely emerge in minds rather than is/are fundamental.

  • @marcobiagini1878
    @marcobiagini1878 Před 14 dny +11

    My name is Marco Biagini and I am a physicist; I want to explain the “observation” problem in quantum mechanics because it is often misunderstood even by many physicists.
    In quantum mechanics the state of a physical system is described by the wave function and does not have defined values ​​for all the physical quantities measurable on it; on the other hand, only the probability distributions relating to the measurable values ​​for these quantities are defined. Once the measurement has been carried out, the system will have a defined value in relation to the measured quantity, and this involves a radical modification of its wave function; in fact the wave function generally describes infinite possibilities while for an event to take place, it is necessary that the wave function assigns a probability of 100% to a single possibility and 0% probability to all the others. If all other results are not eliminated by imposing the collapse "by hand" on the wave function, the predictions of subsequent measurements on the same system will be wrong. The transition between a state that describes many possibilities to a state that describes only one possibility is called “collapse of the wave function”. The time evolution of the wave function is determined by Schrödinger's equation, but this equation never determines the collapse of the wave function, which instead is imposed by the physicist "by hand"; the collapse represents a violation of the Schrödinger equation, and the cause of the collapse is therefore attributable only to an agent not described by the Schrödinger equation itself. The open problem in quantum physics is that the cause of the transition between the indeterminate state and the determined state, cannot be traced back to any physical interaction, because all known physical interactions are already included in the Schrödinger's equation; in fact, the collapse of the wave function is a violation of the Schrodinger's equation, i.e. a violation of the most fundamental laws of physics and therefore the cause of the collapse cannot be determined by the same laws of physics, in particular, it cannot be determined by the interactions already included in the Schrodinger's equation.
    After one century of debates, the problem of measurement in quantum mechanics is still open and still represents the crucial problem for all interpretations of quantum mechanics. In fact, on the one hand it represents a violation of the Schrodinger equation, that is, a violation of the fundamental laws of physics. On the other hand, it is necessary for the laws of quantum physics to make sense, and to be applied in the interpretation and prediction of the phenomena we observe. Indeed, since the wave function represents infinite possibilities, without the collapse there would be no event; for there to be an event, then there must be one possibility that is actualized by canceling all other possibilities.
    This is the inescapable contradiction against which, all attempts to reconcile quantum physics with realism, break.
    Quantum mechanics does not describe reality as something that exists objectively at every instant, but as a collection of events isolated in time (i.e. the phenomena we observe at the very moment in which we observe them), while among these events there are only infinite possibilities and there is no continuity between events.
    In fact, the properties of a physical system are determined only after the collapse of the wave function; when the properties of the system are not yet determined, the system is not real, but only an idea, a hypothesis. Only when collapse occurs do properties become real because they take on a definite value. It makes no sense to assume that the system exists but its properties are indeterminate, because properties are an intrinsic aspect of the system itself; for example, there can be no triangle with indeterminate sides and no circle with indeterminate radius. Indeterminate properties means that properties do not exist which implies that the system itself does not exist; actually photons, electrons and quantum particles in general are just the name we give to some mathematical equations. The collapse represents the transition from infinite hypothetical possibilities to an actual event.
    Quantum mechanics is therefore incompatible with realism (that's why Einstein never accepted quantum mechanics); all alleged attempts to reconcile quantum mechanics with realism are flawed. The collapse of the wave function represents a non-physical event, since it violates the fundamental laws of physics, and can be associated with the only non-physical event we know of, consciousness. Therefore, events can only exist when consciousness is involved in the process. However, the fact that properties are created when a conscious mind observes the system in no way implies that it is the observer or his mind that creates those properties and causes the collapse; I regard this hypothesis as totally unreasonable (by the way, the universe is supposed to have existed even before the existence of humans). The point is that there must be a correlation between the existence of an event (associated to the collapse of the wave function =violation of the physical laws) and the interaction with a non-physical agent (the human mind); however, correlation does not mean causation because the concomitance of two events does not imply a causal link.
    No cause of collapse is necessary in an idealistic perspective, which assumes that there is no mind-independent physical reality and that physical reality exists as a concept in the mind of God that directly creates the phenomena we observe in our mind (any observed phenomenon is a mental experience) ; the collapse of the wave function is only a representation of God's act of creation in our mind of the observed phenomenon and is an element of the algorithm we have developed to make predictions and describe the phenomena we observe. This is essentially the view of the Irish philosopher George Berkeley, and in this view God is not only the Creator, but also the Sustainer of the universe. The fundamental aspect of quantum mechanics is that reality is not described as a continuum of events but as isolated events, and this is in perfect agreement with the idealistic view which presupposes that what we call "universe" is only the set of our sensory perceptions and that the idea that an external physical reality exists independently of the mind is only the product of our imagination; in other words, the universe is like a collective dream created by God in our mind. Idealism provides the only logically consistent interpretation of quantum mechanics, but most physicists do not accept idealism because it contradicts their personal beliefs, so they prefer an objectively wrong interpretation that gives them the illusion that quantum mechanics is compatible with realism.

    • @ritamsadhukhan772
      @ritamsadhukhan772 Před 14 dny

      That's basically how physics function and I know you are not a physicist if you are then you are a religious one because smart physicist know they can't disprove quantum mechanics it exists and it workers.
      The device you are using is thanks to quantum mechanics, the next generation computers will also be quantum mechanics gift to us.
      Non dualism there is no difference between the observer and the observerd.
      Non duality is not a new concept existed for thousands of years in Hindu philosophy this idea of non dualism is not meant for half minded idiots it's made for top level genius scholars.
      Non dualism in short means your the universe itself not a seperate entity.
      The dream concept you just mentioned is also a common reference to the universe is Hindu scriptures we all are in the dream of mahavishnu and this whole creation is a dream.
      Satan Dharma called for a reason because it's not a religion it was for greater open minded minds to explore there thoughts meta physics to be exact and now the same debate is back quantum mechanics and brahman very much similar isn't it.
      Go read the Upanishads perhaps you'll have a clarity.
      You know what the very first hym in rig veda the first veda is the hym of creation in this hym the last verse says who knows how this creation began the one who sits above it or may not know the truth.
      (May not know the truth even god) Ever heard a religious book saying that.
      U see it liter

    • @stephengee4182
      @stephengee4182 Před 14 dny

      The engine which powers free will in biology is the delivery of momentum observables along mesoscopic microtuble pathways through proto- conscious focus. This engine powers the delivery of the male's DNA to the female's egg, and powers cell division to create new life from single cells of coalesing strands of DNA which can create and sustain whole bodies with arms, legs, organs and fully aware brains. In the brain, microtubles are fixed in place in neuronal, ion channel enabled pathways, to recreate harmonies in orchestrated playback of quantum symphonies of past and future visionary compositions. God is consciousness, consciousness is the quantum ocean, and we are waves on the quantum see from which the universe, momentum and free will emerges.

    • @Iamthepossum
      @Iamthepossum Před 13 dny

      Wow; many many thanks to you Marco for taking the time to explain your position and your insights so throughly and so lucidly. A fact which is even more impressive given the possibility that English may not be your first language. I am very appreciative of your thoughtfulness and kindness in sharing these insights with the rest of us. May I ask if you are a professor or academic, and if so, where do you teach or do research? Kind regards to you from Los Angeles ❤

    • @EinSofQuester
      @EinSofQuester Před 9 dny

      You are contradicting yourself when you say the universe existed before humans (I think you mean consciousness in general) existed. To say this implies you believe in realism. But you already said that QM is not compatible with realism. What do you mean when you say the universe "existed" before consciousness?

    • @marcobiagini1878
      @marcobiagini1878 Před 9 dny

      @@EinSofQuester I meant that, from a realistic perspective, the universe should have existed before humans.

  • @thingsiplay
    @thingsiplay Před 15 dny +3

    We don't understand Quantum Mechanics. We only know how to calculcate. This is the equivalent to a mathematical equation in school you learned to do the right steps, to get the end result. But you would not understand why and what is actually happening. Still get best rating for.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 15 dny

      I don't know who "you" are. Since I understand quantum mechanics just fine I have to assume that "you" are a bunch of intellectually lazy people who weren't paying enough attention in school. ;-)

  • @stashmark7105
    @stashmark7105 Před 5 dny

    Sean Carrol is throwing down the gauntlet for whomever would prove the truth of non local hidden variables over the theorems viability

  • @rahul19free
    @rahul19free Před 15 dny +2

    Quantum Entanglement could be the reason a particle looses its wave like behaviour. Let me explain, In a double split experiment the particle behaves as a wave until it is observed, the observer(Human or a detector) is also made of particles which has a Quantum state. When a particle in the double split experiment is observed, the wave like behaviour is lost because of the quantum state of the observer. This means in the classic world all the particles doesn't have their wave like behaviour because of Entanglement of observer. Which means Entanglement is not one of the property but it is the property how Quantum Physics works.

    • @ritamsadhukhan772
      @ritamsadhukhan772 Před 14 dny

      In short yeh sab Maya hai bache , not real.
      Sirf atman real hai.
      That's what Edward Schrodinger believed.

  • @42Goatee
    @42Goatee Před 15 dny

    ...have been very impressed over the last decade or so by the ability of public exposure to turn even the most nobaly serious and scholarly scientists into shameless media tarts....keep up the good work boys, you have a fan...

  • @objective_psychology
    @objective_psychology Před 15 dny +3

    Yes.

  • @bazookajoe6133
    @bazookajoe6133 Před 15 dny +87

    Sean Carrol is the premier physics communicator, argue me, 😎

    • @RatzerLeaf
      @RatzerLeaf Před 15 dny +14

      Only a bot would say such a thing

    • @Jay-7154
      @Jay-7154 Před 15 dny +3

      And Michelle Thaller

    • @matthewweflen
      @matthewweflen Před 15 dny +9

      Sean Carroll AND Brian Greene, that is

    • @jayanderson66
      @jayanderson66 Před 15 dny +6

      I love Brian and Sean but Sean's ability to get out there with many different platforms and topics has me following practically everything he does. There are both top shelf communicators. Sean does not suffer fools and Brian never seems to be with them

    • @justinava1675
      @justinava1675 Před 15 dny +9

      Brian Green is my fav. I like the topics he covers

  • @irisalajem3318
    @irisalajem3318 Před 14 dny +1

    So entanglement only applies on particles being observed by humans? What does it mean without an observer? Thank you for an amazing and inspiring conversation 🙏🏻

    • @ben_spiller
      @ben_spiller Před dnem

      Nothing to do with humans. A human isn't required to do a measurement. When an entangled particle interacts with its surrounding environment, that's a measurement and it destroys the entangled superposition.

    • @irisalajem3318
      @irisalajem3318 Před 21 hodinou

      @@ben_spiller But the cat is dead and alive until the observer joins in , right?

  • @FigmentHF
    @FigmentHF Před 15 dny +2

    I love Brian and Sean, both very smart, often humble, and able to communicate complex science with not an ounce of pretence or condescension. I’m purely interested in the deep, epistemological questions of reality, and so the fact that both of these guys delve into “pot head” questions with vigour, is refreshing. They are both clearly creative and curious, as well as being academically gifted

    • @geraldbutler5484
      @geraldbutler5484 Před 15 dny +1

      Einstein said if you can’t explain your theories to a 9 year old they are not good theories.

    • @Mentaculus42
      @Mentaculus42 Před 15 dny

      So it becomes a "pot head" question if one questions “orthodoxy”. An orthodoxy that in someways is extremely “effective” and in other ways is clearly incomplete and incompatible between the two “pillars” of this orthodoxy. So it is solely the domain of the "pot heads" to question “reality” & the underlying mechanisms‽ That case Elon should have all the answers.

  • @glennmiller9759
    @glennmiller9759 Před 15 dny

    I'm only a few minutes into this but as a numbskull who struggles with the cerebral aspects of it, I'm really enjoying watching and listening to the two of you kindred spirits, so to speak, bantering about the esoterica that I would so love to understand.

  • @eenkjet
    @eenkjet Před 15 dny

    If the UWF encodes a mind into the future on a worldline within a causal patch, the UWF by universality must be equal to or greater than that mind.

  • @stephenzhao5809
    @stephenzhao5809 Před 15 dny

    17:42 ... now in the conversation with theists toward the end we began to think about quantum mechanics and its implications for the babric the nature of spacetime itself this is an issue that you spend some time thinking about as well so what illumination does quantum mechanics or many worlds give to your picture of what spacetime is 18:05 SC: I mean that's a great question because it's a little misleading to even think about many worlds as many worlds right like Everett didn't put in a bunch of Wordls it's the theory of the wave function just obeying the Shrōdinger's equation and it's one possible theory there's other options and in physics we have puzzles like gravity right like quantum gravity with string theory is purportedly a theory of as well as other theories the other parts of nature that we know from expeiments uh the matter particles electronmagnetism the nuclear forces we've done a very good job in what we call quantizing them that's to say we start with a classical theory and then we have a cookbook for turning this clasical theory into a quantum theory but there's no guarantee that that works there's there's no unique way of constructing every possible quantum mechanical theory from a pre-exist clasical theory nature doesn't do that nature jsut starts quantum from the start 19:03 ... 22:31 can we spend just a few minutes talking a little bit about entanglement as that was something that we spoke about with the lease and was certainly a key feature of quantum mechanics because as I think many people know the Nobel Prize in Physics you know not long ago 2022 awarded to three folks whose real impact was in the arena of entanglement and you pointed out to me and I hadn't even noticed it myslef that the Nobel Prize citation (yeah) was actually a little bit misleading and it relates to this question of the measurement problem we sort of have it here so the citation says that the Nobel Prize was for work whose impact was to show that quantum mechanics cannot be replaced by a theory that uses hidden variables and as this is an idea which is one other apporach to solving the measurement problem what what are hidden variables and why is that wrong 23:34 SC: there's there's a very juicy story that I can't resist telling here

  • @richardhunt809
    @richardhunt809 Před 14 dny +2

    Many Worlds is an interpretation of QM. Instead of saying that one of the superposed states wins and the others disappear, it’s saying that the others continue to exist in some other universes. But if we can’t see or interact with these other universes then in what sense do they exist? Purely in our minds, I say. This explains nothing at all.

  • @bnjm8868
    @bnjm8868 Před dnem

    Quantum mechanics imply multiple extra dimensions within the one universe. Assuming it indicates entire multiple universes is a huge stretch and leap.
    I enjoy Brian Greene, by Sean Carroll is pretty good.

  • @wmstuckey
    @wmstuckey Před 10 dny +1

    Sean is mistaken when he says we never observe the electron in a superposition of up and down. A vertical spin "up" state is the 50-50 superposition of horizontal spin left and spin right ("up" and "down" with respect to horizontally oriented Stern-Gerlach magnets). So, when your vertical spin measurement gives an outcome of "up", you are in fact observing a horizontal superposition of "up" and "down".

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 10 dny

      So when my dice throw gives me a 1, in reality it was a superposition of 2, 3, 4 and 5? How much did you have to drink just now? ;-)

    • @wmstuckey
      @wmstuckey Před 10 dny

      @@schmetterling4477 You have the wrong classical counterpart, you want a classical bit, which has only two possible outcomes. Let's run through an example.
      Suppose your classical bit is a box that may or may not contain a ball when you open it, and your state is 50% "yes" it contains a ball and 50% "no" it does not contain a ball. That is a mixed state not a pure state. A mixed state is a distribution of outcomes over the pure states (actual measurement outcomes) for the measurement in question (in this case that measurement is "open the box"). There is no measurement you can do on that classical bit with an outcome state (pure state) equal to 50% "yes" + 50% "no".
      The difference between a classical bit and a quantum bit (qubit) is quantum superposition, which means that there is a measurement you can do whose outcome is that 50-50 outcome. That is, every pure state transforms continuously to any other pure state, i.e., all states in the probability space between any two pure states are pure states themselves for a qubit.
      People often confuse mixed states for classical bits with pure states for the quantum superposition of qubits. A good example of that is Schrodinger's Cat. You often see people claim Schrodinger's Cat is in a quantum superposition of Live Cat + Dead Cat and when you open the box the state collapses to either Live Cat with 50% probability or Dead Cat with 50% probability. But, if Schrodinger's Cat is *really* a qubit and not merely a classical bit in a mixed state of 50-50 Live Cat-Dead Cat, then there has to be a measurement (the complementary measurement in this case) whose outcome is Live Cat + Dead Cat with 100% probability. That is, (|LC> + |DC>)/root(2) has to be a pure state, not merely a mixed state, if Schrodinger's Cat is in a quantum superposition (is a qubit) as claimed.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 10 dny

      @@wmstuckey How much energy comes out of a quantum system is MY choice as an experimentalist. It's determined by the spectral operator that I stick into the Born rule. It's NOT determined by the system alone. I can keep an excited atomic state "alive forever" by putting it into a resonator that suppresses the emission of the spectral line through which the atom would decay in the physical vacuum. It is this energy that determines the final state aka measurement. I don't think you understand how quantum mechanics actually works. All this collapse language is complete bullshit, just like Schroedinger's cat. :-)

    • @wmstuckey
      @wmstuckey Před 10 dny

      @@schmetterling4477 My response is textbook quantum mechanics used everyday in quantum experiments. Just because you don't use it doesn't mean no one uses it.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 9 dny

      @@wmstuckey You simply didn't read the textbooks carefully enough, Mate, and then there are things about nature at this level which you will NOT learn from the usually textbooks, to begin with. They can only be found in the primary literature and the lab. :-)

  • @Robinson8491
    @Robinson8491 Před 14 dny

    When will the next one with Carlo Rovelli be on?

  • @jean-pierredevent970
    @jean-pierredevent970 Před 4 dny

    Many worlds seems "too many worlds" for an electron going to a double slit. It's not said here but I think even Sean Carroll thinks it's more that that the complete local causal situation splits up. Further away the universe is not disturbed by what happens there at that double slit. But I wonder if any point in space is not all the time in superposition and so surrounded by a cloud of alternatives all the time? However, where are they then? Yes, so is there a kind of hyperspace, where all these possibilities surrounding any point, reside?? Even harder problem: why is only one option (in my own model) realised ? I think because the clouds of the other particles force all particles to choose the result where the possibilities of the neighbours are least or perhaps "less" affected. It could be like a competition is taking place but less change overall is favored.

  • @groovycoolies2517
    @groovycoolies2517 Před 13 dny

    Quantum Theory Explained. " In every realm of possibility there is an infinite outcome. but in the end there is only one". Neural Pathway Analysis vol.1. Perceptions Of Reality, Individuality , Destiny, And The Evolution Of Meaning.

  • @aminam9201
    @aminam9201 Před 15 dny +1

    someone said: I am naturalist but I believe in multiple universes where the hidden gods work miraculously from behind the scenes (poetic)! Planet of the apes is planet of endless wonders!

  • @Xcalator35
    @Xcalator35 Před 10 dny

    Far too short...these two gentlemen are absolutely briliant communicators of science. After Carl Sagan, these two follow next 'ex aequo'

  • @vibehighest
    @vibehighest Před 12 dny

    Brian was super giggly this recording

  • @markoszouganelis5755
    @markoszouganelis5755 Před 15 dny +1

    Thank god there is CZcams! So I will never miss any Videos from my Beloved "World Science Festival". If you make every day 24/24 Live Videos, I will follow continually watching, so my hardware will dissolve in the spacetime continuum, and I will "teleport" in your University Class...😊 Thank you so much ALL of YOU!☀ (Please note that I am a Boomer trying to be not a boomer) 😊😊

  • @CharlesSagan1
    @CharlesSagan1 Před 10 dny

    If I could have just one request granted by physicists, it would be for them to accept that the Fundamental Forces are self-aware and sentient, not just a non-observant effect of cosmic mechanics.
    The answer to non locality and a fuller understanding of Quantum Mechanics, as Sean rightly calls for, starts to unfold the moment you do.
    Almost like some sort of electromagnetic field of vibrational communication between a self-aware individual and the Conscious Universe causes answers to gravitate towards you. From very non local positions.
    Spooky action at a distance isn’t that spooky once you see yourself as a neuron within a Brain-like Universe that has Fundamental Forces for synapses.

  • @christianvulpescu1398
    @christianvulpescu1398 Před 12 dny

    I think, it's more understandable to talk about " interfering of paritcals or quantum systems " rather the "masking mesurements" on them.
    This, I think, led Einstein to ask, if the moon would be still there if he wouldn't look at it.

  • @ddtt1398
    @ddtt1398 Před 8 dny

    Gosh. Two such bright guys, so addicted to a crazy theory from before their times, and dismissed times and again.

  • @carsonderthick3794
    @carsonderthick3794 Před 15 dny

    You maybe factor from any mass to calculate anything from saying we know what nothing equal to a whole is

  • @jun27ful
    @jun27ful Před 15 dny

    If multiple universes is correct Sean Carroll is the host and Brian Greene is the physicist guest speaker 😀

  • @wulphstein
    @wulphstein Před 15 dny +1

    We are told QM means multiverse, but it's not an empirical fact.

  • @thechurchofdave
    @thechurchofdave Před 9 dny

    I'm not saying this is possible or impossible but where does the energy an matter for the multiple universes come from? Is the thrown dart possibility creating a new universe? If not then are there trillions of worlds just ready to accept the various choices we make and stear them through yet another universe every time we make a decision? If so. . . How is this decision being communicated across multiple universes? The universe that we are aware of is pretty large. If there are countless others "out there" . . . how is the information inside our universe crossing over into others that are at least one universe deapth away from us? How is that happening? How fast is it happening? How many times can it happen at once? Where is the energy to move that information from one place to another even coming from?
    Or are this multiple universes somehow in dimensions that are not distant from us but right here with us but in ways that we cannot see or experience them?
    I love this stuff but the more they talk, the more complex my questions get inside my head.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 9 dny

      It doesn't have to come from anywhere. MWI is a trivial mistake.

    • @thechurchofdave
      @thechurchofdave Před 8 dny

      @@schmetterling4477 Well it's just sn unptoveh idea that may or may not be wrong. The opinions of weather it's right or wrong are certainly trivial. If an idea is presented at real or a possibility then the questions that arise from it are worthy of discussion.
      So if this idea is being presented as a possible reality then the questions arise and the answers are due. This person is saying he thinks this idea is likely to be real. At that point then it does "have to come" from somewhere. If people want to believe this idea then they should have answers or possible answers for the questions it brings up.
      Just saying something is right or wrong without any ideas or proof to explain how that assumption is adopted, is a major mistake.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 8 dny

      @@thechurchofdave You can find the mistake in the second sentence of Everett's thesis.

    • @skylark8828
      @skylark8828 Před 5 dny +1

      @@thechurchofdave It is a hypothesis and there are no experiments that can prove beyond all reasonable doubt that the 'many worlds' view of reality is correct. It's just work in progress like many things, one day someone will come up with a better explanation ...

    • @thechurchofdave
      @thechurchofdave Před 5 dny

      @@skylark8828 I understand that. However, a hypothsis is better when it presents more potential answers than questions. So I understand that this is rather hypothetical and there is no way to prove it with actual evidence yet BUT it seems to me that in order to present a reasonable hypothisis, you should at least discuss these types of problems that the idea presents us with. And in my opinion, the biggest question here is where does all this "stuff" potentially come from? It seems to me that presenting ideas of things being there or popping into existance, it's reasonable to ask questions like "So is it already there? Is it being created by the decisions? What forms of communication could there be that would comunicate the changes in reality that then split into different universes.
      I don't think it's reasonable to say "None of this can possibly be true unless you have every shred of proof right now." However, I think it's perfectly reasonable to ask "If you are going to present an idea where a million bowlingballs are going to drop out of the sk, then you should at least be able to throw out some ideas of where and how the things were coming from and or created. "
      In other words there is the difference between a good hypothisis and a bad one. A bad one is going to full of holes that aren't even being discussed even though they are potentialy the biggest problems with it. A good one is going to show how it would likely form, how the conditions became possible, and so on.
      So once again. I'm not trying to critique the base idea. I am saying here a rather large conversation about something potentially existing and yet there are no speculations offered on how it could exist, what it could be made of, where those materials would come from, how the information is moved around and so forth. Those are not the kinds of questions that are usually not even asked.

  • @mediamonster4936
    @mediamonster4936 Před 15 dny

    Great discussion on many levels lol

  • @TitusVI
    @TitusVI Před 13 dny

    is it only humans wo change outcomes? Or can a cat oes the same? Or does a riverfall cause the same reactions

  • @joelmichaelson2133
    @joelmichaelson2133 Před 4 dny

    A particle can exist in two places at once what is the point of measurement ?

  • @timothy8426
    @timothy8426 Před 15 dny +2

    Maybe an infinite number of galaxies throughout space. Physists are putting borders on space, calling it a universe. That would make it finite like a neighborhood. But the frequencies vibrate on. More galaxies and more space. Multiple Physists have divided into speculation without proof of a single universe. We move through space. What is bigger? Space or a universe? Definition of universe and borders.

    • @iridium1911
      @iridium1911 Před 15 dny

      Universe does not imply a border or boundary

    • @declandougan7243
      @declandougan7243 Před 15 dny

      @timothy8426 Sounds like you don’t know anything about cosmology.

  • @markoszouganelis5755
    @markoszouganelis5755 Před 14 dny

    🌈Thank you!

  • @mcglashenmann2181
    @mcglashenmann2181 Před hodinou

    Not sure anyone will get this reference, but Sean Carrol REALLY reminds me of Brennan Lee Mulligan from Critical Role.

  • @Burevestnik9M730
    @Burevestnik9M730 Před 11 dny +1

    The total number of combinations in the spaceworld is 10 power 500. The total number of particles is 10 power 80, and if we count photons, it is 10 power 89. Secondly, there is a trend, and whenever there is a trend, it is a law. This trend is about unexpectedness. Like limes, you are approaching but you never get there. In 10 power 124 years from now, there will be only photons. There will be no time (or better put it, a notion of time), if it ever was. Certainly, there will be no distance as a concept. And here we have the measurement problem as well: how do you measure something if there is no matter around? This state is the state of infinite singularity, "singularum infinitum", which also resolves the problem of CBR and entropy at Big Bang point. More importantly, by incorporating the concept of existence as more fundamental than essence (lat. esse), we lay down the substrate for the many world theory as well. Yes, many worlds, but not in some abstract spatial sense. Rather, these worlds do exist in the infinite sequence of Penrose's eons. One has to grasp the concept of now-forever. Flow of entropy via potentials instead of time - Maxwell equations have been rewritten in this new notation. Sartre said, "existence precedes essence" and Friedrich Nietzsche was also a proponent of the existential approach and never-ending cycle of re-birth. Schrödinger equation is about the state change. It is applied across the entire eon space, we just need to remove time from equations. What the equation tell us is that, yes, every single of those 10 power 500 combinations is bound to occur, and occurs infinitely many times. And in principle, a monkey (from the Monkey Typewriter algorithm) is able to write Encyclopedia Britannica in a single attempt - this is now in the realm of logical possibility.

  • @bluesmokerH1
    @bluesmokerH1 Před 10 dny

    12:34-12:57 You could see the lights turn on? 👀👀

  • @johannesburgreal441
    @johannesburgreal441 Před 14 dny

    if the concept of physical matter reality is given up, and reality is instead viewed as virtual, then quantum physics makes perfect sense.

  • @showmewhyiamwrong
    @showmewhyiamwrong Před 13 dny

    Why is Gravity different?
    Perhaps Because Gravity is a feature of Spacetime “itself” responding to something other than itself. All the other “things” that makeup our Universe exist “within”Spacetime and their actions and reactions play-out on the stage which is Spacetime. When you get down to the Quantum Level there is no Spacetime and hence there is no Gravity to talk about or indeed worry about. If you want to think in terms of the “Spectrum” of our Universe it would stretch from the Probabilistic Quantum Realm continuously to the Singularity state of the blackhole Realm and If Spacetime were simply a Void unto itself,devoid of anything else, across this spectrum there would also be no Gravity to talk about.