Why Quantum Mechanics Is an Inconsistent Theory | Roger Penrose & Jordan Peterson

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  • čas přidán 14. 04. 2022
  • Watch the full episode - • Asking a Theoretical P...
    Dr. Peterson recently traveled to the UK for a series of lectures at the highly esteemed Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. This conversation was recorded during that period with Sir Roger Penrose, a British mathematical physicist who was awarded the 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics for “discovering that black hole formation is a robust predictor of Einstein’s general relativity.” Moderated by Dr. Stephen Blackwood.
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Komentáře • 5K

  • @JordanBPeterson
    @JordanBPeterson  Před 2 lety +531

    Watch a 24/7 stream of my old lecture content while you work, study, and go about your day here - czcams.com/video/ycvO4oIMXyM/video.html

    • @pepevonkek7803
      @pepevonkek7803 Před 2 lety +4

      Sub-Unconscious study... Listen while Im sleeping.

    • @ozzymandius666
      @ozzymandius666 Před 2 lety +9

      Penrose ignores the fact that the measurement apparatus is also a quantum system, one that becomes entangled with the system its measuring, indeed the act of measurement is the act of becoming entangled.

    • @juniorvonclaire3576
      @juniorvonclaire3576 Před 2 lety +7

      I’m with him and can’t understand why the universe would depend upon consciousness. Remove the observer and so the measuring and… ? Seems like any guess moving forward is irrelevant, particularly since the guessing ceases. I’m intelligent but have a feeling that I’m beyond my knowledge base. 🤯🙆🏻‍♂️

    • @anewamericaallnewagain6089
      @anewamericaallnewagain6089 Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks man! Mathematics changed in the higher dimensions. 2+ 2 no longer = 4 in the 9th dimension. I've seen it our energy comes from a vortex in another energy field way beyond anything you can imagine...✌& Thanks...

    • @CrippledKev
      @CrippledKev Před 2 lety +7

      everyone tries to apply mathematics open your simple thinking.... the quantum world, our spirits, computer chips all use frequencies.. is why ' some' music touches your soul. It is in tune with your frequency.. The stars sing we just can't hear them

  • @The-Rest-of-Us
    @The-Rest-of-Us Před 2 lety +3608

    I can’t believe he’s in his 90s. He has such vitality and curiosity. Impressive human being.

    • @forthehomies7043
      @forthehomies7043 Před 2 lety +102

      Yes and very lucky, too. To live to that age AND still have your mind. Very impressive indeed

    • @exerciserelax8719
      @exerciserelax8719 Před 2 lety +61

      Wow! I've seen people in their late 60s who look and sound older. May we all reach the same age with a healthy mind and body.

    • @GyariSan1
      @GyariSan1 Před 2 lety +47

      That’s what happens when you live a healthy life and train your brain everyday.

    • @joedoe3688
      @joedoe3688 Před 2 lety +35

      and now compare him to President Biden ... OMFG

    • @maxiepattie85
      @maxiepattie85 Před 2 lety +7

      he can kickflip too
      got footage

  • @azarothshadowsoul
    @azarothshadowsoul Před rokem +1194

    I didn't realise until now that not only is Sir Roger Penrose still alive but is still active in the field of mathematical physics, truly a legend

    • @craigfowler7098
      @craigfowler7098 Před rokem +50

      Take a look at his Wikipedia page, truly impressive. Not doctor but professor and a sir of maths and physics at both Oxford, Cambridge and Harvard and also Nobel winner

    • @STICKSANDSTONED
      @STICKSANDSTONED Před rokem +5

      Working on it now thank you mich

    • @ryanscarrmusic2329
      @ryanscarrmusic2329 Před rokem +1

      what a strange comment

    • @bluesque9687
      @bluesque9687 Před 7 měsíci

      You been high?

    • @mcride6796
      @mcride6796 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@bluesque9687 On and off recently. You?

  • @sonofadam484
    @sonofadam484 Před rokem +422

    As a mathematical physics student, Dr. Penrose is one of my favorite scientists/mathematicians if not my favorite. It is a bit sad to know he likely won’t be around too much longer, yet it is good to know that he has had a long and successful life.

    • @E_915
      @E_915 Před rokem

      Cool name, fitting for the subject at hand. Also can take on other meanings in this context 🙏🏾😎

    • @user-td5gy2fh3p
      @user-td5gy2fh3p Před rokem

      So dumb that you had to include “as a mathematical physics student…” nobody cares. You could have simply said “Dr. Penrose is one of my favorite…” You were just looking to blow your own horn.

    • @mappingtheshit
      @mappingtheshit Před 7 měsíci +2

      There is no mathematical physics, are you living in 1932? Wtf? There is theoretical physics nowadays

    • @amritas2400
      @amritas2400 Před 6 měsíci +4

      ​​@@mappingtheshit I had mathematical physics last semester for my MSc in Physics. T'was as pain in the neck. So, I refuse to believe that it doesn't exist. Lol.
      But it contained mathematical concepts that are useful for physics, though. Not theoretical physics.

    • @mappingtheshit
      @mappingtheshit Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@amritas2400 jeez your university is living in 1920s

  • @shyrealist
    @shyrealist Před 2 měsíci +30

    5:25 "because my mind was drifting away from what he was saying... which was probably a good thing" 😂
    Amazing

  • @Fair-to-Middling
    @Fair-to-Middling Před 2 lety +1814

    90 years old! And to be so brilliant still. We should all take notice, and keep pushing ourselves to explore the outer limits of our intelligence, no matter what our numerical age.

    • @BobBobby-uh9zz
      @BobBobby-uh9zz Před 2 lety +30

      Wow he looks great for 90, sharp as a tack!

    • @matt_fs
      @matt_fs Před 2 lety +12

      Wow. Not many people can pull off a fringe at 90 😂

    • @russelldriver2476
      @russelldriver2476 Před 2 lety +10

      That is the key to your true health. Keeping your mind sharp and healthy. It will translate to the rest of the body

    • @talllll.ll.1712
      @talllll.ll.1712 Před 2 lety +4

      🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐 YES 😝 You are absolutely on point, renewal of the mind and a growing in understanding and finding a way to have enough faith in something to have complete belief. Praise God

    • @vversusv1364
      @vversusv1364 Před 2 lety

      So true.

  • @joshtimaz
    @joshtimaz Před 2 lety +6445

    This man is 11 years older than Joe Biden

    • @ToLWaM
      @ToLWaM Před 2 lety +336

      Age really is just a number

    • @no-one-in-particular
      @no-one-in-particular Před 2 lety +503

      Not mentally

    • @mikefixac
      @mikefixac Před 2 lety +75

      Yes, but I do believe our illustrious president was a better professor.

    • @bellezavudd
      @bellezavudd Před 2 lety +118

      Yes, Penrose is brilliant. The interview also shows interesting aspects of JP. BUT using pointless math to model your political obsessions in public is petty and ponderous.
      Edit - removed "arbitrary"

    • @_jp_0966
      @_jp_0966 Před 2 lety +318

      I hate to say this but the US will never have a good president unless the public becomes better educated. If everyone’s stupid, they will of course elect someone stupid. Not that I’m any better

  • @Bleak_Hope
    @Bleak_Hope Před rokem +69

    This is heart warming..
    to see Peterson listening so sincerely to Mr. Penrose

    • @davecrupel2817
      @davecrupel2817 Před 2 měsíci +1

      One top tier intellectual listening to, and learning from, another.
      Quite a pleasure to listen to, indeed!

  • @matthewmpillay8040
    @matthewmpillay8040 Před rokem +49

    Honest, brilliant, articulate and always on point. He explains highly complex equations and theories in a way that a layman like myself can understand. Genius.

    • @sonicmaths8285
      @sonicmaths8285 Před 5 měsíci

      To be fair, he had his whole life time time to understand those topics

  • @neillydun
    @neillydun Před 2 lety +1055

    My brain doesn't always follow along, but I could listen to Sir Roger all day. Such an intelligent man.

    • @RiggedVedist
      @RiggedVedist Před 2 lety +24

      That's the problem. He SOUNDS like he's filling your noodle with knowledge via a soothing pseudointellectual delivery but it's all bullshit. Your mind is a septic tank.

    • @kaaajeee
      @kaaajeee Před 2 lety +38

      how can you tell how intelligent he is if you cannot follow his line of reasoning?

    • @rutherford5619
      @rutherford5619 Před 2 lety +64

      @@RiggedVedist why do people like you exist everywhere! Maybe I need to accept it and ignore it. People always feel the need to argue

    • @takeeverythingin
      @takeeverythingin Před 2 lety +8

      @@RiggedVedist yes, he's a 'pseudo intellectual'.. hasn't done anything, doesn't know anything. and he's respected because everyone has been fooled.. including the Nobel committee who awarded him the Nobel Prize.

    • @caliamate1013
      @caliamate1013 Před 2 lety +5

      @@RiggedVedist ...refreshing to read the comments of the unduped!

  • @SocialEP
    @SocialEP Před rokem +1317

    It's incredible that Penrose is this sharp at his age. Shows the importance of continuing to mentally expand throughout life. Love the full conversation from two brilliant men.

    • @con_el_maestro3544
      @con_el_maestro3544 Před rokem +2

      I'm sorry but this guy is not sharp, he's literally slurring his words

    • @Joe-of1ob
      @Joe-of1ob Před rokem +1

      @@con_el_maestro3544 you are a fool

    • @PrimeNPC
      @PrimeNPC Před rokem +78

      @@con_el_maestro3544 even a full blown speech impediment doesn't blunt a sharp mind

    • @sh-kw2ox
      @sh-kw2ox Před rokem

      @@con_el_maestro3544 you nob

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před rokem +4

      Sure, but the most important factor is genetics.

  • @DrAL00isin
    @DrAL00isin Před rokem +121

    One of my biggest pet peeves is when someone says there was a “study” that “proved” something we were debating about as if that should be the end of discussion. If you’ve ever listened to a panel of experts you know science is full of competing ideas and theories.

    • @lookupverazhou8599
      @lookupverazhou8599 Před rokem +11

      Right, but it wins arguments, and isn't that all that really matters in the dominance heirarchy?

    • @davidchamplin4865
      @davidchamplin4865 Před rokem +3

      There was a study that your cell phone wasn't working because the battery was low. The study involved charging your cell phone and confirming it was now working. That should be the end of discussion. Every person does scientific studies every day that lead to an end to any discussing. Lots of science is like that. Not all. But lots.

    • @tgb-vf4es
      @tgb-vf4es Před rokem +16

      There is a difference between practical science and theoretical musings as shown here.
      So when your friend cites something like the sociological experiment that showed that the more people in a situation the less likely a victim is to be helped, you can believe that that situation is likely going to be true for your purposes. Or a study that links use of X medicine to a 100% positive outcome in a disease.
      If a friend cites an essay on why quantum mechanics is an inconsistent theory and claims to end a discussion, that's a totally different scenario and likely just the start of the discussion with anyone who has a minimal grasp of quantum theories.

    • @SaiSumanVphb
      @SaiSumanVphb Před 6 měsíci +2

      Depends on the question really. If you claim quantum mechanics is false, you would be wrong, because there is "proof" for its validity. However, if you are talking about why/how the act of measuring collapses the wave function (as in the video), we only have "proof" that it happens, but the cause/mechanism is open to "competing ideas and theories"

    • @HolyMith
      @HolyMith Před 2 měsíci

      It's a sad reality that in order to know exactly what was proven and if indeed it was proven at all, you need to be able to inspect the work yourself from a place of academic expertise. Otherwise you have to just trust the peer review process.

  • @ooolol
    @ooolol Před rokem +6

    it's truly an honor to hear Sir Penrose.
    to remain this sharp even at this age is absolutely wooow.

  • @azk333kaz9
    @azk333kaz9 Před rokem +540

    True thinkers never appear to be 100% certain. Doubt is the true sign of being a real and genuine genius. They are never dogmatic and always debate their and other’s opinion with an open mind. They leave many doors and questions open.. because this is what drives us all....curiosity. Thank you Jordan for a delightful conversation.

    • @jettmthebluedragon
      @jettmthebluedragon Před rokem +1

      I agree 😐when we say the Big Bang happend and it will end in death and we will never live again 😐may be true but in some ways it’s misleading and it’s ok to say we don’t know 🙂saying the Big Bang created EVERYTHING when we don’t know how life got here in the first place just let’s us know how ignorant humans can really be 😐the universe is not going to say ohh I’m going to die whatever 😑nor will the universe say I stared off with a bang 😐i find that humans are very ignorant and if they find something they must assume it’s true 😐but the true thing is we just don’t know 😑and thats ok 🙂

    • @johncatron8762
      @johncatron8762 Před rokem +31

      That is because the more we learn, the more we realize what we don't know. A person that is 100% sure of something is either lying to you or a fool, or a bit of both.

    • @jettmthebluedragon
      @jettmthebluedragon Před rokem +4

      @@johncatron8762 I agree 😐we say that the universe Begain 14 billion years and I goggle years it will end of heat death forever 😑seems possible 😓but I feel their is much to it 😐WAY much to it 😑

    • @rabokarabekian409
      @rabokarabekian409 Před rokem +42

      You appear to be 100% certain about this assertion.

    • @MM-vs2et
      @MM-vs2et Před rokem +7

      Wish Jordan Peterson thinks this way

  • @karmanic7492
    @karmanic7492 Před 2 lety +829

    It’s rare that Jordan feels completely out of his element - it was interesting to watch him attempt to connect philosophical thoughts he has been exploring with Penrose’s mathematical expression of reality. I’m not sure he was able to make an impactful connection tbh but I think pursuing it is noble and this pursuit will end up being the end game for all thinkers: to connect their philosophic ideas with hard science.

    • @anger.7808
      @anger.7808 Před 2 lety +32

      I just thought about the same thing - the point in all physics theories is to find a universal theory that explains everything. Maybe someday we will find a theory that connects hard science and philosophy, also God. Maybe it’s something as simple as an idea or a question.

    • @karmanic7492
      @karmanic7492 Před 2 lety +24

      @@anger.7808 Definitely feels like science and religion are searching for the same thing through two different lenses, doesn't it? I'm sure they might disagree, but thankfully truth comes in a few flavours.

    • @user-hh5hs3zr5b
      @user-hh5hs3zr5b Před 2 lety +62

      @@karmanic7492 they are searching for the same thing, but religion is so out of depth for the simple reason its not based on any kind of logic which is not built on false assumptions

    • @alexsloan4976
      @alexsloan4976 Před 2 lety +25

      Truth comes in one flavor, reality, and as far as I can tell, science has brought us the closest to reality so far

    • @anger.7808
      @anger.7808 Před 2 lety +14

      @@user-hh5hs3zr5b Well, I didn’t really mean religion as a construction and practices, more like the idea of God (Gods) and their manifestation through us. Religion is like a metaphorical reality, as science is literal reality. Science and religion sadly become more separated, instead they should be treated as tools that both try to describe what is going on. One or the other alone can’t describe everything.

  • @segevstormlord3713
    @segevstormlord3713 Před 18 dny +1

    The thing about the "measurement causes collapse" description is that, as Prof. Penrose said, it glosses over "what is a measurement?" And thus people are left thinking it is a function of observation, when that isn't what the equations say. What the equations say is that the introduction of forces/energy sufficient to _give us something to observe_ will cause a change in the Schrodinger equation's parameters to such a degree that whatever we measured (and the other properties we didn't measure) has changed, and we no longer know what they are.
    Bell's Inequalities lead experts who do definitely know more about this than I do to believe that the uncertainty principle actually does mean there is no definite state until the "collapse" occurs. Of course, the nature of the Schrodinger equation is then ignored as people discuss that it is "in" that state. It isn't; it was measured to be in that state at that time, but the measurement itself made it cease to be and created a new state. The item thus measured now has the energy of the measurement included in whatever its new state is.
    According to Bell's Inequalities experiments, the system _should_ have certain probabilistic distributions of measurements if there are hidden variables - that is, the state actually is not merely probabilistically likely to be in X or Y condition, but rather actually has a value and we just can't know it - but doesn't, and thus superposition must be the rule. But - and I freely admit that this is at least partially my own ignorance - I do not know of any experiments that have properly performed entanglements to really test the full combination of cases. Specifically, all the experiments I know of say, "Well, these probabilities line up in a way that suggests the state isn't fixed until it is measured!" but they ignore that this creates situations where the same particle must have mutually-contradictory states simultaneously; they never measure for this. And the only way to measure for it that I can think of would be three entangled particles, going through (for instance) the three polarized lenses separately. As far as I know, no such experiment has been done, and certainly I have not been able to find anybody reporting on the results of it.

  • @alonsocesarft
    @alonsocesarft Před rokem +3

    Excellent moment between great minds speaking freely. Excellent! Great channel. Thank you!

  • @themachine9366
    @themachine9366 Před 2 lety +237

    As a Physics Ph.D. Student, the collapse of the wave function has not puzzled me as much as my peers. Imagine you are blind and are trying to discover what the surface of a still water lake is like. In your scientific pursuit, imagine you touch the lake and try to perceive what it is like. As you touch the lake, no matter how delicate you are, you produce a wave, the lake changes and fluctuates. It would look to you as if the surface of the lake was never still or at the same place but as if the lake would vibrate up and down with a particular probability. This is exactly what happens when a magnetic field interacts with a particle: you get a Raby oscillation. Quantum mechanics describes the behavior of extremely small objects which you can only observe by interacting with them via fields. These fields are strong compared to the smallest objects in the universe and hence change the object states as it collects the object information. All of your machines need of strong fields to have a reading, so all we can really do is throw a damn rock at the lake and based on splash guess what the lake is like. I think it was Feynman who said, particle physics is like trying to figure out how a clock works by smashing it against a wall.

    • @thejils1669
      @thejils1669 Před rokem +10

      It all boils down to this: if there was no such thing as this property called "sentience" (whatever that is), would the universe even exist. Like the very fundamental philosophical question: "If a tree falls in the forest and there is no one living creature around to hear it, would it still make a sound?" Some people, who claim to be philosophical "savants" and tend to micro-manage the situation, would claim that it would not make a sound, since they define a sound as being a noise that can be perceived. Since there is no living creature around to perceive this noise, it therefore does not make a sound...but it does make noise! Being able to sense nothingness, such as the stillness of a lake without waves still requires sentience. Einstein once quipped that the only thing that can be perceived are forces being acted upon the perceived or upon objects in another frame of reference. We know what it feels like for gravity to act upon our bodies. Is it the same "feeling" an electron has when it is being tugged on by a proton. (Absolute or Total) Panpsychists would tell you that everything in the universe, no matter how much it has been subdivided, has sentient properties, so that the notion of an electron "feeling" anything is a distinct reality.

    • @Funkywallot
      @Funkywallot Před rokem +2

      I am totally ignorant regarding maths and physics. But I understand from your writing that a great deal formulating a problem seems SO very much come from the origine of intuition, the same sort of we all have. It must be immensly gratifying to have the ability to put your deepest intuition and translate it into numbers and experiments ?

    • @rabokarabekian409
      @rabokarabekian409 Před rokem +6

      @@thejils1669 Thank you, Plato - very advanced natural philosophy. How's Aristotle doing?

    • @rabokarabekian409
      @rabokarabekian409 Před rokem +18

      @@Funkywallot Science requires verifiable evidence and repeatable demonstration. Intuition was the massive failure in the thousands of years of natural philosophy.

    • @thejils1669
      @thejils1669 Před rokem +1

      @@rabokarabekian409 ...he's still sentient...as is Socrates...

  • @corygeertgens
    @corygeertgens Před 2 lety +486

    I love how attentive Jordan is, you can see the appreciation and respect he has for Penrose, Which clearly anybody should do if given the opportunity to meet him regardless whether you agree with his views or not, and especially as it being that he is getting older. Well done, A+ for Jordan and A+ for Roger, both remarkable people.

    • @pawmsprings
      @pawmsprings Před 2 lety +11

      The rest of us would need fifty coffees to even come close to Jordan's natural attentiveness here...

    • @DrVonJay
      @DrVonJay Před 2 lety +11

      Idk if you watched the whole interview, but even here Peterson has a very impressionistic response to what Penrose is saying. Their two trains of thought aren't aligned and in the full interview it was even more apparent. At the beginning of the interview Peterson went on several monologues disguised as questions without ever acknowledging that Penrose answered the question already. I think the other host did a fantastic job of following along even with the disagreement at the end of this particular clip.

    • @JohnBender1313
      @JohnBender1313 Před 2 lety +3

      The reason he's attentive is because if true it contradicts Peterson's presuppositions of free will.

    • @aaronmarchand999
      @aaronmarchand999 Před 2 lety +10

      @@DrVonJay Ya it seems like Jordan doesn't really understand what he is saying, which is fine, he's not a physicist, but it feels like he is pretending (or trying to give off the impression to the audience) that he does understand when he doesn't

    • @DrVonJay
      @DrVonJay Před 2 lety +7

      @@steviemac2681 his lack of knowledge isn’t my problem. Not actively acknowledging that he doesn’t know what he’s talking about is the problem. His questions come off as statements expressing what he does know, even if what he does know had already been explained by Penrose and is mildly irrelevent to the detail at hand. The premise of a A good question would start with acknowledging what you don’t know first, and examine ways in which the interviewee can build enough traction toward a simplified model. Instead he’s going on monologues disguised as questions.

  • @jonnyxs892
    @jonnyxs892 Před rokem +3

    You must have loved this Jordan good to see you smile
    I could listen to these two individually for hours together fantastic👏

  • @spawn90761
    @spawn90761 Před rokem +12

    I wish more people in society would enjoy and understand these topics!

  • @King-O-Hell
    @King-O-Hell Před 2 lety +341

    It's so awesome to see a mind operating at a high capacity in an individual who is 90 years old. God bless him, this was great.

    • @quantumpotential7639
      @quantumpotential7639 Před 2 lety +8

      90 ain't old. It's refined, mature, grainy muscle. Have you seen Dorian Yates in his prime? That's grainy mature hard muscle. Premrose is dense mature grainy musculature of the mind. You gotta keep training. Daily. Whatever happens, never skip calves day. Thanks

    • @Dee-nonamnamrson8718
      @Dee-nonamnamrson8718 Před 2 lety +4

      I wish he would have elaborated more on how inserting gravity changes the need for an observer to collapse the wave function.

    • @educationalporpoises9592
      @educationalporpoises9592 Před 2 lety +3

      @@quantumpotential7639 DORIAN YATES AND PENROSE

    • @visceraeyes525
      @visceraeyes525 Před 2 lety +2

      hes agnostic, so you saying god bless him is insulting

    • @PIESTUgaming
      @PIESTUgaming Před 2 lety

      @@educationalporpoises9592 hahahhha

  • @yhj1612
    @yhj1612 Před rokem +730

    This is the first time seeing Jordan trying to wrap around his head a concept that is complicated enough to be outside of his regular “reach”. What a great honor to learn about these school of thoughts from absolute legends such as Penrose, Von Neumann, Godel, and Wigner. Hope to see more of these videos!

    • @mesarosshawn2422
      @mesarosshawn2422 Před rokem +12

      Jordan totally missed the quantum uncertainty that pentode opened with ie the desire to exten models was not calculable but the models were

    • @czgibson3086
      @czgibson3086 Před rokem +152

      Peterson frequently comments on areas outside his specialism and usually betrays his ignorance when he does so. For example, when he said "there is no such thing as climate" or "the Bible is literally the first book" or "it's likely that hospitals do more harm than good". The fact that this man has thousands of followers hanging on his every word is a brutal indictment of education systems everywhere.

    • @slydamiser6317
      @slydamiser6317 Před rokem +20

      @@czgibson3086 obvious troll tho

    • @czgibson3086
      @czgibson3086 Před rokem +57

      @@slydamiser6317 Obvious charlatan too. Such a shame more people can't see it.

    • @inxiti
      @inxiti Před rokem +47

      It shows how out of his depth he is when discussing topics of middling complexity. Penrose broke it down enough that a high schooler could interpret it, and Peterson still insisted on injecting his non-sensical view of the world into it.

  • @markbuckley5109
    @markbuckley5109 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Wish this was longer, amazing that he confessed that even his mind (RP) drifted when he found it tough in a lecture

  • @timelsen2236
    @timelsen2236 Před rokem +2

    Charged cosmic particle tracks in cloud chambers and photographs really cleared this up for me. Nucleation sites or minimum critical radius are those which continue to grow until becoming observable. The silver halide making a colored spot on the film, or the droplet in the cloud chamber form proximity events of the photon or charged particle by capture or polarization of saturated vapor droplets which then attract to coalesce into an observable droplet. Such droplets form a zig zag pattern about the actual charges path. Force between the charge and polarized droplets alter the charges path slightly, but over all since they nucleate on both sides about the charges actual path such deflections cancel by in large. This is taken as the charges path as that's the best we can do. The least squares between these nucleation sites and the charges path can be then justified as it's trajectory. No observer needed, but any observer will only see the path when they finally look. The next observer will then necessarily see the same path or photograph. Each nucleation site collapses the Schrodinger equation, which begins a new probability distribution cone about the last nucleation site. Cosmic rays pass so fast this mechanism underlying the complete image of the final track is never entertained, but implicit in the theory. Similarly for a photograph, as to make it clearer, consider a long exposure of a distant star. As the pixels form the image is refined only limited by the chosen exposure time. The final result is the best image we can do given the limited time and funding to form it. The stars position is better known as the number of photons captured grows. There is obvious uncertainty in considering the center of the image, and more so when the result is hazy. That's quantum mechanics!

    • @legendcat8913
      @legendcat8913 Před 2 měsíci

      This is an analogy for the uncertainty principle?

  • @daveofyorkshire301
    @daveofyorkshire301 Před rokem +268

    This is the sign of a man still searching for answers, a true scientist. Plus a well presented interview, question followed by answer without contention or conflict.

    • @wongscp1701
      @wongscp1701 Před rokem

      And why the dumb act out and complain about and doubt science. It's because they always want the quick answer and use their dumb big mouths to fire at science because it doesn't provide it all the time.

    • @mpjstuff
      @mpjstuff Před rokem +5

      If JP were "searching for answers" then why does he always come back to the SAME answer; biblical? I question the reason of anyone who cannot see this obvious trend to his answers and that he lacks actual critical thinking.

    • @daveofyorkshire301
      @daveofyorkshire301 Před rokem

      @@mpjstuff Jordan Peterson broke under the pressure and was indoctrinated into "the faith". Now he sees things through a lens. He's not been as controversial recently, he's been tamed.
      You can't blame him, he was under constant attack, sooner or later everyone breaks...

    • @mpjstuff
      @mpjstuff Před rokem +2

      @@daveofyorkshire301 Was JP broken by religious indoctrination, or by everyone hammering on him for being a grifter? I can't relate the 2nd situation, but, a hell of a lot more people survived the first. I'll allow excuses for some kid who becomes a criminal because all his heroes and opportunities were bad choices -- but, if JP is absolved -- he's last in line of privileged people making bad choices. I'd say he's just an opportunist and smart enough to fool some, but, definitely not all.

    • @daveofyorkshire301
      @daveofyorkshire301 Před rokem

      @@mpjstuff Grifter? a person who engages in petty or small-scale swindling.
      He is an educated and highly qualified man in his field, tell me what was he selling that you call him a grifter?

  • @StallionFernando
    @StallionFernando Před 2 lety +379

    What I like about Penrose is that he only cares about getting the facts out there while others try to ignore problems or press certain biases.

    • @cdb5001
      @cdb5001 Před 2 lety +12

      He is eloquent, but like any theoretical scientist, which he is, almost all of his presuppositions are based on a faith or assumption that confirms his ideas.

    • @LeavingBabylon_
      @LeavingBabylon_ Před 2 lety +7

      Jesus died on the cross to save you from eternal damnation.
      Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved. Acts 16:31

    • @cdb5001
      @cdb5001 Před 2 lety +16

      @@LeavingBabylon_ hey Leviticus, why don't you take it easy on us sinners, and save the guilt trips for the gullible.

    • @michaelseeker9680
      @michaelseeker9680 Před 2 lety +2

      @@cdb5001 No guilt trip, just a warning.

    • @cdb5001
      @cdb5001 Před 2 lety +21

      @@michaelseeker9680 a warning for what? So if you're culture never heard of Jesus, are you doomed to go to Hell? Give me a break.

  • @marcelackle1279
    @marcelackle1279 Před rokem +3

    Every theory is incomplete.
    Incomplete is a great way of looking at statements and going into discussions in order to add to the incompleteness.
    very nice talk.

    • @Slo-ryde
      @Slo-ryde Před rokem +1

      This is what Kurt Godel stated

  • @mohammadtausifrafi8277
    @mohammadtausifrafi8277 Před rokem +88

    Roger Penrose is an honest and courageous person, and obviously a great genius also.

  • @vlad3950
    @vlad3950 Před 2 lety +422

    I love the fact that Jordan holds discussions on variety of topics on his channels, not just politics. His politics are great, just nice to hear different things.

    • @gerritgeerligs912
      @gerritgeerligs912 Před 2 lety

      What good does it do when our country has fallen into the hands of collectivism, communism, censorship, we are going to hell in a hand basket, philosophy don’t mean shit!!!!🇨🇦

    • @p.h6605
      @p.h6605 Před 2 lety +19

      Why would he just talk about politics? That's not what his main body of work is? That's just what the media blows up.

    • @jZamora87
      @jZamora87 Před 2 lety +12

      @@p.h6605 you're beating a dead horse, most brains dead individuals just come to his channel to hear Dr. Peterson mention God and some right wing ideologies, they ignore the rest of his lecture.

    • @gerritgeerligs912
      @gerritgeerligs912 Před 2 lety +3

      @@jZamora87 what made Peterson famous was rattling against communism on CZcams!!! As I mentioned earlier he hasn’t even commented publicly on the state of our situation in Canada 🇨🇦. We had an election last September and Jordan never came on or commented on anything, he was always making criticism’s. I’ll wager he’ll immigrate to the states 🇨🇦

    • @p.h6605
      @p.h6605 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jZamora87 na man, don't sit above people dude, just tryna let the guy know. There's plenty of things me and you would also be the "dead horse" & beginners at as well. Peace ✌️

  • @nitrostudy9049
    @nitrostudy9049 Před rokem +185

    I had the great honour to share some dinners with this wonderful man at my college in Oxford. I shared a flat with one of his DPhil students. Sadly, at dinner, with his students there, the QM discussions were too complex for me to follow. I just sat quietly and listened, filled with brain love.
    My flat mate and I used to share a bottle of (cheap) wine and try to talk about our respective areas. I struggled with conceptualsing N-dimensional space, and he couldn't fathom the sloppiness and emergent phenomena of biological systems. But, it was fun trying.

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher Před rokem +15

      Cool, after I became an engineer I went to work for an aerospace company that would pay for continuing your higher education. I started studying biology and met Lynn Margulis in 1974 or 75, not exactly sure. Anyway she gave a lecture I went to at UCLA. She invited me to take her summer class on her Evolutionary Symbiosis (reason I wanted to hear her lectures) at U-Mass Amhurst. My company let me take a Sabbatical (unpaid) and off to Massachusetts I drove. She was great to talk to and had a total grasp of the current knowledge of biological systems.
      She was no mere evolutionary theorist and she despised Neo-Darwinism's dogmatism and that really came out when EO Wilson came to Amhurst I think to promote his book Sociobiology The New Synthesis that Lynn told him taking insect sociology and applying it to humans was bogus (my word, hers' was stronger) and similarities didn't make it scientific. Dr. Wilson, always a gentleman told her is that any way to talk to someone that was going to say something nice about her hypothesis.
      What a lunch. They agreed on more than they disagreed and Lynn even asked me about evolution's lack of mathematical applications. She knew I was an engineer and I often described biology in those terms and Dr. Wilson surprised me by agreeing with my viewpoint. I didn't know he used math in his studies. I told him on a superficial level evolution was a chaotic system, but in micro it didn't seem that way to me. He then surprised me and actually agreed with me. We all had an interesting lunch that turned into an afternoon.

    • @nitrostudy9049
      @nitrostudy9049 Před rokem +2

      @@MountainFisher Cool story, but I'm not sure of the direct link with JP, RP, or consciousness?
      Your company sounds like a great one to work for.
      Re: bee hives, ants etc ... nearly every author expanding on their 'novel' paradigm will pull webs of knowledge into a structure of nodes and associative connections to support their conjecture. Including JP and RP :) although their intellectual rigor is fairly robust.
      These webs are distorted, or perhaps more fairly, biased towards their paradigm.
      With particular reference to insect: human sociobiology ... I know almost nothing, but that makes it more fun being weakly constrained by fact ... humans have evolved hard wired and social environmental neural development and learning to survive within tribes and the natural environment. Associated with this are social behaviors that balance yin and yang (soft/ hard, individual/ group, selfish/ sharing/ parasitism etc). At the macro level, this plays out in personality distributions, political distributions (left/ right etc), laws, social values etc.
      At the larger scale, society is like an oil super tanker. It takes ages to change direction. Some political types strategise long term to move the tanker left or right. And, in doing so, swing it too far. That is when us poor saps, more in the middle, increasingly push back. Essentially saying, 'whoa, you have gone too far'.
      You see this to some extent with the swing in general views with each generation.
      You also see this interplay in other domains with younger/ older, less experienced/ more experienced, those set in their ways/ those less so, etc.
      Whoops, I waffled on. Your last point is most relevant. When people take time to discuss, in the absence of social (media, work place, cancel culture, etc) threats, they agree on most things. That, by the way, is the biggest danger of cancel culture - it destroys societal exploration and explanation of views. Until push back builds up, as normalisation starts to occur.
      Hardly surprising re your point about mostly agreeing, as we are all humans :)

    • @DrVonJay
      @DrVonJay Před rokem +1

      Sorry but brain love is a feeling I didn’t know I had. lol

    • @ibelieveinaccuracy.fact-ch5942
      @ibelieveinaccuracy.fact-ch5942 Před rokem

      @@nitrostudy9049 All good till you banged on about ‘cancel’ culture. So-callled cancel culture is a reaction to US assimilation culture which wants everyone to line up the same like Nth Korean zombies - that’s very hard to do if you are Obviously different - and if you are subtly different. ( think race, gender, different ideas…). RP and JP are both victims of dominant views that don’t like thier approaches - and would rather they assimilate. Assimilationists want your annoying differences to go away. Integrationists want everyone’s opinion but in a manner that is mindful of others - a civilised discussion as RP just demonstrated. MAGAts and thier ilk complain about a straw man cancel culture problem to hide thier own desire to force everyone to assimilate and be just like them.

    • @ibelieveinaccuracy.fact-ch5942
      @ibelieveinaccuracy.fact-ch5942 Před rokem

      @@nitrostudy9049 As you no doubt know human groups have always used social exclusion as punishment. There has always been ‘cancel’ culture. It’s just that in US history and now it’s used to shut down voices that had no political power. Now those voices have growing political power and those who have been sheltering under the dominant hierarchy of privilege don’t like this shift. Change is uncomfortable so they moan about cancel culture, previously wielded as a weapon by their dominance hierarchy. Which towns in the US presently ‘cancel’ African-Americans who want to live there? Or ‘cancel’ people who want to have abortions? That would be women just so you know. Or cancel ‘kids’ who have different gender orientations? Or cancel ‘migrants’ even though the US was built by migrants………….. you talk about ‘cancel ‘ culture in one tiny Petri dish where it very seldom appears and ignore it every where else where it really matters. In discussion of QM there are no human political consequences - hence no cancel culture until you get to questions of tenure and research funding, of course! Here is an analogy. Car drivers need to follow road rules or there is chaos. Similarly conversations need to be conducted within civility and manners or there is chaos. Bringing cancel culture into this conversation is like bringing stop signs into a freeway

  • @The_Feral_Christian59

    I really appreciate someone who when they are hearing something new or something they don't fully understand choose to listen and invest themselves in listening. Jordan Peterson is a seeker and it shows. I'd love to have a conversation with him, bounce the information I have off of him and have a dialogue about it.

    • @xjaskix
      @xjaskix Před rokem

      he's a religious nut. far from a "seeker". his openness is surface level, a facade.

    • @The_Feral_Christian59
      @The_Feral_Christian59 Před rokem

      @@xjaskix surely a conversation with him would be better then a conversation with you. But if I want to know how to beat that one video game boss, I'll come your way.

  • @Question465
    @Question465 Před rokem +11

    "You see, one thing is, I can live with doubt, and uncertainty, and not knowing. I think it's much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers which might be wrong. I have approximate answers and possible beliefs and different degrees of certainty about different things. But I'm not absolutely sure of anything, and there are many things I don't know anything about, such as whether it means anything to ask why we're here, and what the question might mean. I might think about it a little bit; if I can't figure it out, then I go onto something else. But I don't have to know an answer. I don't feel frightened by not knowing things, by being lost in the mysterious universe without having any purpose, which is the way it really is, as far as I can tell -- possibly. It doesn't frighten me." [smiles] -
    Richard Feynman

    • @shyrealist
      @shyrealist Před 2 měsíci

      I read that in the voice of Roger Penrose 😅

  • @oisnowy5368
    @oisnowy5368 Před 2 lety +127

    That's the measurement problem. You can describe what happens... but the thing is when you stick a device in-between to do the measurement you interrupt what would have happened otherwise. People have a way of thinking about observers: look, don't touch. You cannot do that with QM. In order to make a measurement you introduce interactions.

    • @N0Xa880iUL
      @N0Xa880iUL Před 2 lety +5

      Precisely

    • @bavorena
      @bavorena Před 2 lety +2

      Basically what he just said in the video then ?

    • @danielm5161
      @danielm5161 Před 2 lety +17

      This back and forth was confusing because Jordan and Roger were mish mashing between Roger's idea that consciousness collapses the wave function and his alternative idea that gravity collapses the wave function. Roger has suggested both in the past, but they are each independent ideas. It seems Roger has moved away from the conscious idea and closer towards gravity as being the cause of collapse. The truth is neither work that well, at the moment the easiest way to formulate this issue is to posit that the universe physically instantiates multiple history's with atomic process's.

    • @emadhassan5248
      @emadhassan5248 Před 2 lety +6

      Well that is exactly what I thought about the double slit experiment , the measurement device of the electron collapses the wave function of not the consciousness , till I found out about a version of the double slit experiment called (Delayed eraser double slit experiment) where the device is totally removed from the experiment and the observation became totally by conclusion , the experiment basically give the observer the two possibilities , if the observer has a way of conclusion , the wave function collapses , if the observer doesn't , no wave function collapse , which was shocking to me cause it supports the consciousness theory

    • @aGenericBanana
      @aGenericBanana Před 2 lety

      .

  • @markuswx1322
    @markuswx1322 Před 2 lety +414

    People like Brian Greene and Neil de Grasse Tyson tend to get complacent and snooty when others talk this way about quantum physics. But they can't cancel the enormous presence of Roger Penrose. He simply outclasses his entire generation.

    • @aritrajitroy724
      @aritrajitroy724 Před 2 lety +47

      I think it has got to do more with maturity and experience . Brilliant as they are but NDT and Brian Greene simply can't matchup to the experience of Roger Penrose. The experiential finesse of a person like him is truly unparalleled . The more you joust with a certain idea the more sceptical you get about it not to ridicule the theory or discredit the proponents of the theory but simply with the goal of adding nuance and broadening horizons of knowledge . We need to get past the idea of absoluteness of theories (esp scientific ones ) and focus more on evolving pre-established ideas .

    • @markuswx1322
      @markuswx1322 Před 2 lety +18

      @@aritrajitroy724 Agreed. We must abandon the cocksureness that comes with achieving recognition in a field so confounding as this. Scientists are in some ways as competitive as athletes and there is a lot of high-sounding trash talk going on. In addition to mathematical brilliance, Sir Roger has invoked the indispensable philosophical component in his analysis. It is a delight to attend to his equanimity and deep insights.

    • @tobyway5093
      @tobyway5093 Před 2 lety +18

      Penrose is at least a league above

    • @stormtrooper9404
      @stormtrooper9404 Před 2 lety +33

      @@aritrajitroy724 It has nothing to do with maturity or experience!
      Simply put NDT is(was) underscoring student with absolutely no work behind him!
      Brian Green on the other hand has put all of his career on String Theory with obscure work with very little citation and importance outside of that field!
      So basically we are talking about two pop scientists who happen to ride the media(read money) train very successfully! Nothing more, nothing less!
      Comparing them to Sir Roger Penrose is blasphemy to say the least!

    • @GuitarsnSnooker
      @GuitarsnSnooker Před 2 lety +4

      May I remind he was hawking adviser and out class him anyday

  • @andrewphillips-hird3761

    The closest I come to understanding quantum mechanics is by analogy with object relations theory, so I ask, given the superposition of idealised spouse and devalued spouse (or, if you prefer, ideal parent, exciting-disappointing parent, and rejecting-attacking parent; any such example will do) which collapses when they text the subject, what would be the particle physics equivalents of:
    1) the subject's mobile receiving the text; 2) the subject's phone vibrating; 3) the subject feeling the phone vibrate; 4) the subject interpreting the sensation of vibration with having received a text; 5) the subject deciding to check their phone 6) the subject seeing the name of the sender; 7) the subject associating the written word with the spoken name; 8) the subject associating the spoken name with the internal object; 9) the subject deciding to open the text; 10) the subject reading the written words of the text; 11) the subject's phonological loop producing the sounds represented; 12a) the subject understanding the semantics of the text; 12b) the subject understanding any pragmatics being communicated; X) the subject having one of the part-objects pertaining to that external object activated? (number X because it can appear in various positions)
    (Any takers? :p)

  • @PeppermintPissy
    @PeppermintPissy Před rokem +6

    I'm so happy to live in a world where we have access to listening to penrose, he's a mind boggler

  • @ChalkanCheese
    @ChalkanCheese Před 2 lety +133

    A great clip showing your diversity of topics and an even greater display of your reserve to not interject but allow the guest to complete their subject to its fullest extent, kudos Mr Peterson.

    • @SLEEPYBROWN95able
      @SLEEPYBROWN95able Před 2 lety +1

      Now if he could do this with all * of his guests, that would be awesome. I wish he took this approach when he interviewed Robert Greene. Nonetheless, hail the lobster!

    • @gregorysagegreene
      @gregorysagegreene Před 2 lety +2

      Except at one point he did call it the Wave 'Form'. 🤣

    • @carsanovadidrifto800
      @carsanovadidrifto800 Před 2 lety

      Hey fam, I hope that you and your loved ones are well. I would like to ask you the most important question ever asked:
      Who is Jesus? Not who is He to you. Rather, who is He really?
      Jesus is the Son of God, who came to the world as a man. He lived a perfect and sinless life . Even though He was perfect and sinless, on the cross of Calvary God wrathfully punished Him for the sins of the world. 3 days later He rose from death. Now He is seated at the right hand of God, ruling as King over Heaven and Earth.
      On the judgment day He will judge you, me and every human being that has ever lived. Those who believed in Him will enter eternal joy with Him, but those who did not believe in Jesus will be sent to eternal condemnation.
      So turn from your sins and believe in the Jesus. Believe and hope that you can be forgiven for all your sins because of His death and resurrection. He took your place in Hell, so that if you submit to Him as your Lord and God, you can be forgiven and take His place in heaven- you will be made sinnless and perfect before the Holy Father. He'll also give you a new heart and mind that can love and obey Him.
      Jesus lives so that you can have true life and freedom, and most importantly so that you can have an eternally peaceful relationship with God.
      You are dead, and Jesus is your Hope of love.
      Acts 15:11
      ”On the contrary, we believe it is through the grace of the Lord Jesus that we are saved, just as they are."
      Ephesians 1:7
      ”In Him, we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of His grace"
      Ephesians 2:8
      ”For it is by grace you have been saved through faith, and this not from yourselves; it is the gift of God,”
      John 11:25-26: "Jesus said to her, 'I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die; and whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this?'
      1 Corinthians 6:14: "And God raised the Lord and will also raise us up by his power."
      Romans 6:9: "We know that Christ, being raised from the dead, will never die again; death no longer has dominion over him."

    • @minhuang8848
      @minhuang8848 Před 2 lety +1

      In this case, it's more a matter of him not having the slightest goddamn clue of what is happening, least of all when JBP is opening his mouth. But I guess kudos for being unprepared or something? For giving people a useless platform?

  • @donvineyard8654
    @donvineyard8654 Před rokem +23

    Loved the interview...only wish it was longer. Penrose has been such a brilliant mind in science, and his was my go-to books. Love to listen to him consider these questions that have conflicted me for decades. His ability to think out of the box is exhilarating. Jordan was obviously enjoying himself. I was saying the same thing... "go ahead and go into it deeper!".

  • @jessebbedwell
    @jessebbedwell Před rokem +2

    When Mr Peterson leans into frame, it creates such a beautiful shot!

  • @georgetait386
    @georgetait386 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Theoretical Physics Masters student here. I agree with Penrose, consciousness most certainly should not be required for a system to be observed. My view, is that anything that carries information away from the system is an observation on that system (e.g. consider a photon interacting with an atom and being scattered).
    Interestingly, the collapse of the wave function and the Schrödinger equation have something in common, they are postulates of quantum mechanics. Meaning they are both taken without proof, it just so happens that the framework we derived from them agrees with a lot of experimental evidence

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 Před 2 měsíci

      This is totally standard, I'm not sure what Penrose is trying to say. A measurement in QM only refers to an interaction, there is no observer required.

  • @Thespaseman
    @Thespaseman Před 2 lety +242

    Jordan Peterson I totally loved this interview. Hearing you probe someone of this caliber and school of thought was great

    • @user-vr6gq1be8o
      @user-vr6gq1be8o Před 2 lety

      ᴛᵉˣţ𝄍✉𝑾𝒉𝔮ᴛᵗ𝑠𝑨𝑝𝑝 ✚𝟏𝟕𝟐𝟎𝟐5𝟖𝟔𝟐𝟏𝟔✔
      ʀᴇɢᴀʀᴅɪɴɢ ʙᴛᴄ/ ᴇᴛʜ ɪɴᴠᴇsᴛᴍᴇɴᴛ ɪᴅᴇᴀs
      ʟᴇᴛ ʜᴇʀ ᴋɴᴏᴡ ɪ ʀᴇғᴇʀʀᴇᴅ ʏᴏᴜ◦◦
      ᴛʜᴀɴᴋs ғᴏʀ ᴡᴀᴛᴄʜɪɴɢ ..

    • @frozzytango9927
      @frozzytango9927 Před rokem

      Peterson suck, im here for Roger.

    • @ozzyoz1495
      @ozzyoz1495 Před rokem +7

      He didn't probe. JP has 0 expertise in this subject. He should have let someone else do this. What a wasted opportunity :(

    • @djuk6573
      @djuk6573 Před rokem +5

      "Probe" , no, no he didn't, he had no clue about the topic, it was embarrassing, the fact he's posted it makes it worse, as it shows he's not aware how little he knows and thinks this exchange has some merit. It doesn't.
      I normally like JP btw so don't think I'm some lefty, I'm not, I'm into physics.

    • @tatsuyaradheya3528
      @tatsuyaradheya3528 Před rokem +8

      @@djuk6573 ? Isn't the purpose of asking or interviewing someone who have a different expertise than you in the hope of learning something you don't know? Peterson is a psychologist. I mean, i don't even see the problem with him not knowing much about the subject . Isn't that why he's asking?

  • @petercohen3966
    @petercohen3966 Před rokem +9

    So joyful when I saw there's a 90min version of this conversation. Interview Penrose monthly and you'll create an incredible resource for all scientists for all time.

    • @scottchegg546
      @scottchegg546 Před rokem +2

      Thank you, I'll go listen to that 90 minute version.
      Sir Roger Penrose is a treasure and I only hope more people can have the opportunity to learn from him.

  • @ElonTrump19
    @ElonTrump19 Před rokem +3

    This has to be one of the bravest things Sir Penrose has ever done on a public stage.

  • @OmarAbdulMalikDHEdMPASPACPAPro

    Thanks for sharing this with us! I really enjoyed watching it! 🙂👍🏾

  • @karensilver8853
    @karensilver8853 Před 2 lety +45

    I had been perplexed by Schrodinger's cat. I no longer am thanks to Roger Penrose. My cousin, Dawn, a mathematician and physicist, called quantum mechanics "God's practical joke." Nice to see how right she was.

    • @alaron5698
      @alaron5698 Před 2 lety +19

      I remember Slavoj Zizek retold a joking account of quantum mechanics (or sub-atomic particles I think it was). While God had made everything in the world make sense and be law-abiding, he had been sure that humans would never evolve to become smart enough to go beyond a basic understanding of atoms, so when he started making sub-atomic particles he had had enough and said to himself "Fuck it, they'll never notice anyway!"

    • @honeybeeblossom5846
      @honeybeeblossom5846 Před 2 lety +3

      @@alaron5698 I just read that in zizek’s voice 🤣

    • @alaron5698
      @alaron5698 Před 2 lety

      @@honeybeeblossom5846 I hope you added some nose-rubbing for good measure!

    • @lukasstanik1107
      @lukasstanik1107 Před 2 lety +4

      @@alaron5698 and so on and so on...

    • @myggggeneration
      @myggggeneration Před 2 lety

      @@alaron5698 God made subatomic particles *after* everything else?

  • @PTKu
    @PTKu Před 2 lety +130

    Penrose is an incredibly smart and at the same time very humble man; the bright intellect that understands the limits of our knowledge and scales the power we have over the universe into correct proportions. There is an objective reality that is independent of our consciousness. This line of thinking is indeed the cure for the intellectual diseases of our times.

    • @Pat_11131
      @Pat_11131 Před 2 lety +6

      You have proof of this non-mental reality?

    • @charlesblithfield6182
      @charlesblithfield6182 Před 2 lety +1

      Well said!

    • @guidodurante9495
      @guidodurante9495 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Pat_11131 What has been demonstrated with overwhelming evidence is that a particle's position or direction respond to a function that gives different probable states as a result (the graph of that function looks like a wave, where it looks higher where it's more probable and lower when least probable, hence 'wave function').
      When measuring that particle, the wave function that represents it's probability collapses into one specific state, which is the one that has been "observed". But "measure" and "observe" don't mean that a conscious being looked at them. There is no way of passively measuring something on the subatomic scale. In order for you to know the state of a particle, that particle must have interacted with something you prepared for it to interact. By reading that interaction is that you can draw a conclusion, by that time, that state has already been cemented into one.
      So, no, there's no proof of a non-mental reality, because that is not what quantum mechanics is about. But by taking advantage of the mathematical equations that have been postulated regarding quantum particles, we are now able to engineer computing hardware orders of magnitude greater than ever before.

    • @Pat_11131
      @Pat_11131 Před 2 lety +6

      @@guidodurante9495 ok have fun with your quantum computer, I'm interested in Truth, which is what QM points us towards. It's not the person making the wave function collapse because that person is made of atoms and therefore part of the quantum system. In order to break this chain, as the father's of QM say, you need a extra-physical process to collapse it, and the best candidate for that is consciousness (what you really are, not something your brain (atoms) produced)

    • @guidodurante9495
      @guidodurante9495 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Pat_11131 I mean, it's a nice point of view. Not all the fathers of QM say that, most don't even have a standpoint on that specific issue. And that is what the scientific method is about.
      What I said is, there's no proof (or evidence) for or against either non-mental reality or mental reality.
      So it's up to free interpretation, that means neither is the Truth until there's evidence. Of course you can believe one or the other and defend it until one is demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt. At that point that's it for Science, the rest is faith.
      I hope we can know more about consciousness within our lifetime, it's a very interesting subject that we know close to nothing about.

  • @jasonh.8754
    @jasonh.8754 Před 7 měsíci +1

    When you smash things together you will normally get inconsistent results. Smashing things into each other (such as particles in a particle accelerator) would not normally be regarded as a repeatable experiment. You would need to have extremely precise control over each impact to gather any meaningful data.

  • @martinl6133
    @martinl6133 Před rokem +5

    Penrose is a patient and polite man, as can be seen in this meeting.

  • @snes09
    @snes09 Před rokem +15

    If anyone is wondering, Roger Penrose won half the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2020. His discovery was that black hole formation is a prediction of general relativity. He's a super smart guy. Check out some of his works!

  • @desertshadow6098
    @desertshadow6098 Před 2 lety +101

    Physics and science in general in a constantly dynamic state of incompleteness. That’s what makes it so maddeningly fantastic.

    • @robbhays8077
      @robbhays8077 Před 2 lety +18

      IMO, that's because science does not describe the actual way the world works but rather a model of the way the world works. The model will always fail in certain areas, no matter how much we patch it up to make it fit.

    • @Allothersweretakenn
      @Allothersweretakenn Před 2 lety +5

      Tell that to dr fauci

    • @Peglegkickboxer
      @Peglegkickboxer Před 2 lety +14

      Except when it comes to climate science and COVID. Apparently the science is set in stone and no one can question anything.

    • @mariongagnon6324
      @mariongagnon6324 Před 2 lety +1

      The academic curtain, don’t look. Just believe

    • @stengrafflarsen
      @stengrafflarsen Před 2 lety +1

      And if you already know the answer - you have faith

  • @Cheekiemoney
    @Cheekiemoney Před rokem +18

    Thank you Roger for standing up for this

    • @JosiahWarren
      @JosiahWarren Před rokem +2

      Jordan has an obsesion to force a creator as observer but roger just rejects multiple times

  • @lawrencedreams
    @lawrencedreams Před 7 měsíci +13

    I’d really suggest you read this book:
    “Irreducible: Consciousness, Life, Computers, and Human Nature”
    The author is Federico Faggin, fellow Italian physics and engineer, he’s also the inventor of the first microprocessor which is the reason why we have most of our technology today.
    He then started developing a scientific theory of consciousness through quantum mechanics that really resonates with some concepts found in Tao, Induism, Buddhism and ancient philosophy but through a scientific lens.
    He states that consciousness as quantum mechanics is an internal experience that can’t be replicated or known if not from within. And classical physics is the objective and symbolic translation of it. So as cells are part of a whole and they have the total genome inside of each of them, we as consciousness are parts of a unity which is experiencing itself subjectively (like Bill Hicks also said in his stand ups).
    It’s really fascinating and he’s probably rediscovering this old truth and being a precursor to the scientific understanding of this stuff. I really think you should learn about him as you would really find it enlightening

  • @thehobbyfam
    @thehobbyfam Před 2 lety +80

    I absolutely love that he conceded to his mind wandering and that he actually credited it to his advancement in thinking on this issue.

    • @shashankh3
      @shashankh3 Před 2 lety +2

      his consciousness got him played during that lecture. this is what you meant right??

  • @ricshumack9134
    @ricshumack9134 Před 2 lety +6

    Brilliant interplay between synthesis and specialist perspectives. Like many, this paradox has always fascinated me. With this framing, it seems the measurement issue has another facet, which is that modelling a system creates a "duplicate" in a different conceptual space. This phenomenon would seem to normally, but not necessarily, require conscious observation. Like everything else, the scope definition is absolutely critical.
    I need another coffee this early in the day 😊

  • @HB-oo9ty
    @HB-oo9ty Před 6 měsíci +3

    Penrose is giant. Kudos to interviewers for making it happen and bringing up such exciting discussion.

  • @Louis412e
    @Louis412e Před rokem +2

    The wavefunction collapse is not a consciousness problem and I think he's just referring to how it was historically perceived as such by a handful of thinkers. The inconsistency he is highlighting is that the Schrodinger's equation does not describe the singular event of measurement, which is not by itself an issue because measurements, which are (mathematically) described as operators acting on wavefunctions, have nothing to do with the dynamics of a system isolated by itself (which is accurately described by Schrodinger's or Dirac's equation). You still have a Schrodinger's equation describing the post-measurement system, except it's simply the state in which your system has collapsed. If you want a full picture of the system including every possible interactions, you need exotic physics theory that are an absolute pain in the ass to generate any refutable theory pillars in.

  • @leejankovskis7814
    @leejankovskis7814 Před rokem +21

    Physics, so captivating. I love this sort of stuff and I thank my old high school physics teacher for opening my eyes to the wonderful world of physics.

  • @troycarlson9313
    @troycarlson9313 Před 2 lety +4

    Mr Peterson, it is quite the sight to see you smiling and chuckling again. I am delighted to be able to attend your presentation in Seattle on the 3rd. Be well :)

  • @hamzailarzeg
    @hamzailarzeg Před 2 měsíci +2

    The world has no idea how valuable this person is. He's a mankind treasure.

  • @ryanblais6208
    @ryanblais6208 Před 9 měsíci +20

    The trouble with these sorts of discussions is that in order to properly explain them one has to dive into some abstract mathematics or concepts that are subtle and basically outside the realm of ordinary experience, yet Penrose has such a deep and complete understanding that he is able to relate these concepts in simple terms more or less comprehensible to us mere mortals. Leonard Susskind is another scientist with a similar gift.

  • @thegreatreverendx
    @thegreatreverendx Před rokem +8

    Roger Penrose is the type of person who talks fluently to anyone about a complex subject such that they understand it even though there’s a lot more to it.
    Jordan Peterson is the type of person who will make great efforts to seem like he understands the subject even when he obviously doesn’t and misses the point.

  • @DDan1967
    @DDan1967 Před 2 lety +30

    My late father, who was a Physics Professor, would have loved this video.
    RIP Dad

    • @NuclearSmoores
      @NuclearSmoores Před 2 lety

      The world doesn’t revolt around you let your father Rest In Peace.

    • @user-hh5hs3zr5b
      @user-hh5hs3zr5b Před 2 lety +5

      @@NuclearSmoores he didn't say the world revolves around him, he said what he felt while watching the video. That is one of the purposes of the comment section

    • @user-hh5hs3zr5b
      @user-hh5hs3zr5b Před 2 lety

      @@minhuang8848 this is not really a discussion so ( physics grad here)

    • @minhuang8848
      @minhuang8848 Před 2 lety

      @@user-hh5hs3zr5b I mean yeah, hence me putting it in quotation marks. It's more about JBP making Penrose lose his sanity slowly but surely.

    • @user-hh5hs3zr5b
      @user-hh5hs3zr5b Před 2 lety

      @@minhuang8848 yeah 😂

  • @olafhaze7898
    @olafhaze7898 Před rokem

    thats so cool that you pointing this out with the learned patterns that become autonomously its of such great help. but i wonder if there are people which have not the "ability" that these patterns become autonomous, like they are doing this always for the first time. And where is the attention put on after we have learned patterns, on the flow, on the speed on accuracy? I believe right now you can divide attention to a maximum of 2 but you can exchange the objects of attention in patterns too, to reach out further. There are so many questions on this topic and i can only work out from my experience but you have the opportunities to have insights in stats of groups relating to this. sadly you don't seem to reply on yt ;) anyway great stuff so far

  • @KevTheImpaler
    @KevTheImpaler Před rokem

    Wow, an interview with Roger Penrose. I read his book, Emperor's New Mind, many years ago. I even understood a fair bit of it (although not Clerk Maxwell).

  • @jonathanmitchell8698
    @jonathanmitchell8698 Před 2 lety +14

    I think the title should say "incomplete," not "inconsistent." If it was inconsistent, it wouldn't be a scientific theory because it would imply a logical contradiction. It is only incomplete because the framework that defines QM cannot make any claims about what does or doesn't happen during the "collapse" of the wave function.

    • @bunyu6237
      @bunyu6237 Před 2 lety +1

      I agree, but to add I think it's not about what or what doesn't happen when collapse happen (this is well known). But the question is when does collapse happen? We know that at least collapse already happened when we observed it (thus the theory why observation cause collapse). But does it already collapsed even before we observe it?

    • @localverse
      @localverse Před rokem

      @@bunyu6237 That's an interesting point. How then do we ever know for sure that it was ever uncollapsed to begin with? Like, how do we know it wasn't already collapsed? On a side note, curious what Penrose had hinted about gravity playing a role in collapse, at 3:19...

    • @thomasbreust3516
      @thomasbreust3516 Před rokem +1

      I’d disagree, the inconsistency is that the Schrodinger equation is linear and continuous, and should theoretically govern all evolution in QM. But then you have this probabilistic, discontinuous jump that is not governed by any equation and is at odds with the Schrodinger equation. So the 1st and 2nd postulates are in disagreement about evolution of the wavefunction, but we sort of just ignore it and carry on because all the calculations work.

    • @jonathanmitchell8698
      @jonathanmitchell8698 Před rokem

      @@thomasbreust3516 but if we had a rule for determining when collapse occurs, then we would basically just have a piecewise continuous function which is not mathematically inconsistent. It's unsatisfying in my opinion, but I don't think it would necessarily be inconsistent with other aspects of quantum mechanics. I personally don't think quantum mechanics describes the physical system itself though. It seems to me like quantum mechanics simply describes our knowledge of a system, which allows us to make useful predictions, but is maybe not useful for developing physical interpretations of the actual systems in question. Specifically, I think there are probably nonlocal hidden variables that give rise to the uncertainty of quantum mechanics. Bells theorem proves that local hidden variables cannot explain experimental results, but it says nothing about nonlocal hidden variables. I think that the collapse of the wave function is just a way of describing when knowledge is gained from experimental results rather than propagated or inferred from experimental results. And ideas like decoherence which assume that the wave function does not collapse, but just becomes increasingly constrained by entanglement of a quantum object with it's environment (at least, that's my understanding of the concept), in my opinion, are just describing how our knowledge of many different things interact. In other words, we have knowledge about the equipment we use to perform experiments, so when a particle becomes entangled with that equipment, we can use our knowledge of the equipment to infer something about the particle.

    • @localverse
      @localverse Před rokem

      @@thomasbreust3516 what if we simply redo the postulates so they're in agreement about the evolution of the wavefunction... could that work?

  • @boblovesmary
    @boblovesmary Před 2 lety +85

    Thank you soooo much for talking across disciplines, Jordan. Can’t tell you how much I love this. I believe humans are coming upon a fundamental change and it’s going to come partially from conversations like this.

    • @banehog
      @banehog Před 2 lety +8

      Sure, I'll bite. What fundamental change is this?

    • @Doctor.T.46
      @Doctor.T.46 Před 2 lety +2

      @@banehog I also wait for his revelation

    • @Doctor.T.46
      @Doctor.T.46 Před 2 lety

      @@nuqwestr It depends I suppose if you agree with Penrose. There are plenty of his colleagues that don't. I respect his right to have an opinion but it doesn't mean his opinion is right. Theoretical physics is about opinions and theories.

    • @Doctor.T.46
      @Doctor.T.46 Před 2 lety

      @@nuqwestr Interesting points my friend, thank you. Unfortunately in science we don't have the luxury of accepting something as plausible and possibly correct. That's the problem, through nobody's fault, withe theoretical physics.

    • @Doctor.T.46
      @Doctor.T.46 Před 2 lety

      @@nuqwestr With respect, it wasn't a Royal we. I am a scientist so I'm part of the scientific community...that's why I said we. Roger Penrose richly deserved his knighthood...and his Nobel prize. You forgot that.

  • @koenraad4618
    @koenraad4618 Před rokem

    Valentini described the meaning of Born's "fundamental" rule of QM in the context of Louis de Broglie's Pilot Wave theory: it indicates a statistical equilibrium between pilot waves and the (particle) velocity wave, such that both waves (also called the 'dual wave solution' by de Broglie) can be described by just one wave function. Valentini clearly described that Born's rule does NOT hold for all quantum systems that are in non-equilibrium with their (background) pilot waves. Perhaps a measurement of a 'quantum system' is such that it requires a NON equilibrium interaction with a quantum system, which automatically violates Born's rule of QM, such that the Schrödinger wave function (that "collapses") is inadequate to describe 'measurement'. So that means we have to fall back on De Broglie's Pilot wave theory. It is an urgent matter to get an understanding about the physical nature of De Broglie's pilot wave! What kind of wave is a Pilot wave? Hint: Pilot waves are not TEM waves, but they might be electrodynamic in nature (Tesla's primary longitudinal "ether" wave). Funny, Antony Valentini published papers about the Wheeler DeWitt equation (quantum gravity), which cannot satisfy Born's rule of QM, in Valentini's opinion. Erik Verlinde's 'emergent gravity' theory (a gradient of quantum information entropy) also hints into the direction that quantum gravity is beyond Born's rule and implies a 'non equilibrium' quantum system (implied by the word 'entropy gradient'). Pilot waves have frequency, and that also means 'entropy' if and only if Pilot waves also carry energy that depends on frequency, so we are talking about a frequency 'gradient' of pilot waves, due to "ether density/temperature" gradients, such that a gravity force is exerted on a 'non equilibrium' particle 'quantum system' (non-equilibrium due to a pilot wave frequency gradient). Nikola Tesla had the last word on all these matters, and Einstein was fully aware of that.

  • @Turboy65
    @Turboy65 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The collapse of the wave function, which happens when we try to peek behind the curtain, so to speak, is a mystery, but that does not invalidate quantum mechanics. It may be incomplete, so the task is to try to make it complete.

  • @KeithCasey973
    @KeithCasey973 Před 2 lety +240

    I just cited this issue in a recent paper for my “Psychology of Religion” class. I did a book review/response to Bertrand Russell’s “Why I am not a Christian”. A brilliant and disturbing book to read as a practicing Christian myself. My goal was to respond and argue against Russell’s points. My professor also read the book in his college years and changed to Agnosticism after reading it. He’s an extremely logical and educated man, so I was concerned for what my grade might be, as I knew we would disagree on certain things. Scored a 96!

    • @Style50360
      @Style50360 Před 2 lety +9

      Did it influence your faith in Jesus?

    • @ancientferret
      @ancientferret Před 2 lety +7

      I'd love to read your work

    • @KeithCasey973
      @KeithCasey973 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ancientferret send me your email !

    • @KeithCasey973
      @KeithCasey973 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Style50360 coming full circle it did. I was happy to come across some great research that supports Christianity. But Bertrand Russell’s book was challenging and I wouldn’t recommend it to any Christians.

    • @alaron5698
      @alaron5698 Před 2 lety +61

      @@KeithCasey973 Why wouldn't you recommend it to Christians? Isn't that a bit dishonest? If one's faith can't withstand scrutiny, then that should raise some red flags.

  • @blueboy189
    @blueboy189 Před 2 lety +78

    Imagine being lucky enough to attend lectures by Paul Dirac. But then, people in 50 years will say similar things about people who were lucky enough to attend Penrose's lectures. A brilliant mind.

    • @Epilogue_04
      @Epilogue_04 Před 2 lety +4

      Indeed, one of the researcher's on my university is known as one of the best, and he was a Penrose student in his youth

    • @sankalp2520
      @sankalp2520 Před 2 lety +1

      On top of that imagine not listening to his lecture and looking out of the window. haha

    • @domestinger8805
      @domestinger8805 Před 2 lety

      personality worship is akin to everything outside of science

    • @blueboy189
      @blueboy189 Před 2 lety +2

      @@domestinger8805 - His large, and extremely impressive body of work is peer reviewed, which sort of rules out personality worship in this instance. It's his knowledge and contribution to Science that is being revered. Armchair Psychology at it's finest...

    • @domestinger8805
      @domestinger8805 Před 2 lety

      @@blueboy189 so then why would you feel lucky enough to attend a lecture when all of his work is yours outside of the lecture. To perhaps gain extra insight? Not for most, most want to salivate over getting to tell someone else that they were once graced with the presence of "such a brilliant mind"

  • @StarPopyful
    @StarPopyful Před 3 měsíci

    Great interview. Thank you!

  • @CollyDoo
    @CollyDoo Před rokem +1

    I am truly humbled by the amount of human intelligence on this video. Smartest men on thr planet on one video. Blessed!

  • @brendanl2580
    @brendanl2580 Před 2 lety +13

    Thank you Roger Penrose for having such a rational perspective on a subject that often seem anything but (at least to a layman such as myself anyway).

  • @joelthomastr
    @joelthomastr Před rokem +34

    Valuetainment asked Peterson about the benefits of being famous and he basically said it's that he can pick up the phone and ask anyone anything to satisfy his curiosity. Turns out this is the kind of person he had in mind. Way to go!

  • @deadpoolgaming8161
    @deadpoolgaming8161 Před 4 měsíci

    *Loved it, all the time he was very trying to explain quantum mechanics in a simple way, so that people could understand this,*

  • @HarryGuit
    @HarryGuit Před rokem

    Doesn‘t that depend on if the process of measurement touches into the system thus exacting an influence (which btw could be quantisized) or if it is a measurement of the side effects of the system (like some radiation) which allows for conclusions on what‘s going in on within the system thus not exacting influence into the system?

  • @miareal1746
    @miareal1746 Před 2 lety +4

    Fabulous conversation Please more of this amazing minds that need to be recorded and heard 👏🙏❤️

    • @user-im1gi1rw2j
      @user-im1gi1rw2j Před 2 lety

      ᴛᵉˣţ𝄍✉𝑾𝒉𝔮ᴛᵗ𝑠𝑨𝑝𝑝 ✚𝟏𝟔𝟏𝟗𝟖𝟑𝟔𝟏𝟗𝟎𝟕✔
      ʀᴇɢᴀʀᴅɪɴɢ ʙᴛᴄ/ ᴇᴛʜ ɪɴᴠᴇsᴛᴍᴇɴᴛ ɪᴅᴇᴀs
      ʟᴇᴛ ʜᴇʀ ᴋɴᴏᴡ ɪ ʀᴇғᴇʀʀᴇᴅ ʏᴏᴜ◦◦
      ᴛʜᴀɴᴋs ғᴏʀ ᴡᴀᴛᴄʜɪɴɢ ◦◦...

  • @lawyeroutlaw
    @lawyeroutlaw Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you so much for interviewing Penrose, he's a brighter mind than almost anyone alive, doesn't get enough recognition for that even though we use his diagrams all over the place. But my favorite conjecture owed to him is "CCC" which is a mindbending possibility to consider. Wow! Thank you, Jordan!

    • @brianbranson2896
      @brianbranson2896 Před 2 lety

      @@cw4597 dont mention it, likewise with the small caps impersonation

  • @Mykareyu
    @Mykareyu Před rokem

    what an amazing human being is Penrose and Peterson following him in the most polite way!

  • @susanarupolo2212
    @susanarupolo2212 Před rokem +2

    For me Roger Penrose is a brilliant mind and at the same time very humble.

  • @weenyhutgaming3167
    @weenyhutgaming3167 Před 2 lety +7

    I love so much that these two had a sit-down. My soul was healed partially after watching this.

  • @dragons_red
    @dragons_red Před 2 lety +145

    Absolutely love this Dr. Peterson! Please do more of these "self critique" of science talks, they are terribly interesting and important (Dark Horse podcast has much of this in their content and absolutely love listening to it).
    As a college graduate of Physics (who went in another direction professionally), I always struggled with these types of epistemological questions that popped in my head (that none of my professors cared to entertain) and remained a healthy skeptic of science since, with greater magnitude in the recent years of the emergence of scientism.
    I believe science has it's positive and useful purpose, but the commercial gain as well as the cultism/politics infesting it has damaged and demeaned it, bringing with it more harm than good.
    Science needs a "sanity check" and conversations like this and those by Brett and Heather are exactly what we need.

    • @mr.christopher79
      @mr.christopher79 Před 2 lety +8

      no doubt, never forget to question everything

    • @VittamarFasuthAkbin
      @VittamarFasuthAkbin Před 2 lety +1

      I read very often, that things change in a direction over time. So I read from you, that things get worse. It might be that things are bad now, but they are getting better, stay the same or anything inbetween. With the end of the cold war, the amount of research gained and the institutional practice, it might be better than it was ever before.

    • @manchesterunited4619
      @manchesterunited4619 Před 2 lety +1

      Hey man, just wondering what your opinion is on René Guenon’s (a French perennial philosopher and metaphysical explorer) conclusion that the science of the Middle Ages which had inherent intuition prioritised has been reduced purely to the practical and sensual realm and thus is now open to infestation from materialist and secularists?

    • @dougsherman1562
      @dougsherman1562 Před 2 lety +9

      Same story for me, Dragon. Graduated in Physics and then went on to different professional fields. The biggest take away from my Physics education was a realization that many things about the world and universe we think are true today, will likely be untrue as we learn more over time. Friends and family get frustrated we me on many subjects when I tell them "I don't know". If our politicians and the "science" charlatans that advise them would be honest with the masses and when appropriate say "we're not sure" or "we don't know", the public would be better served.

    • @dragons_red
      @dragons_red Před 2 lety +1

      @@manchesterunited4619 haven't read him, but his theory sounds alot like what Peterson is talking about these days, which I agree with. I use to be an Athiest who thought science has all the answers but over the years I have seen the limitations of it, and Peterson articulated it in a way that made it much clearer to my intuitions.

  • @Beautyoutofruin
    @Beautyoutofruin Před rokem +1

    Great vid, these are topics I’m interested in

  • @Showmetheevidence-
    @Showmetheevidence- Před rokem +2

    Why are we surprised by this video title?
    Quantum mechanics is both massively complicated (& hard to measure/experiment on) & a relatively new field of science - we have so much to learn or discover about our world.
    For some reason there’s this general “feeling” in the public that we know a lot more than we do. Arrogant.

  • @johngagon
    @johngagon Před 2 lety +4

    Matt O'Dowd does a great job on PBS SpaceTime explaining some of these concepts to those without the math but requiring a better understanding than the average human. As I see it, collapse of a wavefunction could simply be an underlying physical reality that can only be approximated statistically using QM/QED. (see also pilot wave theory).
    Metaphors are always going to be inaccurate but combining them together, you get some picture. I see light as planar spheres that travel outward in space, much like a bubble. When the two slit is presented, single dots may hit probablistically but their pattern is a wave interferrence pattern because the underlying data is statistically a wave. If a bubble is emanating, blown up by that property, c, then the exact contact point on a sphere with a capturing entity (an electron of a measuring device), is up to probability and this goes with the uncertainty with some degree of statistical certainty. This metaphor still simplifies a lot since it doesn't consider the possibility of multiple simultaneous contacts. Amazingly, the way an egg knows how to avoid a second sperm seems intuitively analagous to this.
    The eye is a link in the chain of observation and is actually part of a chain of electromagnetic responses and is a material device. The measurement might link to a digital readout, the readout to the eye, the eye to the brain. I defer the consciousness questions to those experts.
    Comments welcome.

    • @user-vr6gq1be8o
      @user-vr6gq1be8o Před 2 lety

      ᴛᵉˣţ𝄍✉𝑾𝒉𝔮ᴛᵗ𝑠𝑨𝑝𝑝 ✚𝟏𝟕𝟎𝟕𝟒𝟑5𝟑5𝟒𝟑✔
      ʀᴇɢᴀʀᴅɪɴɢ ʙᴛᴄ/ ᴇᴛʜ ɪɴᴠᴇsᴛᴍᴇɴᴛ ɪᴅᴇᴀs
      ʟᴇᴛ ʜᴇʀ ᴋɴᴏᴡ ɪ ʀᴇғᴇʀʀᴇᴅ ʏᴏᴜ◦◦
      ᴛʜᴀɴᴋs ғᴏʀ ᴡᴀᴛᴄʜɪɴɢ .. . .

    • @posadist681
      @posadist681 Před 2 lety

      my mind is always blown by the double slit experiment

  • @jorg4224
    @jorg4224 Před 2 lety +4

    The book "What is Real?" is a good general overview of various foundational perspectives on QM and attempts that have been made to solve the 'measurement problem'. It's also a good introduction to the main characters involved such as Bohr, Heisenberg, Everett, Bell, Bohm, etc. as well as some of the social/political currents that run through the history of physics in the 20th century.

  • @mattphillips538
    @mattphillips538 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I think Roger's point is that there are states of systems in which the wave function collapses, and there are states of systems in which observations may be made by observers, and that these are the same.

  • @paulthomas963
    @paulthomas963 Před měsícem

    I wish there were more discussions like this between people of wildly different fields!!!!

  • @Neurability
    @Neurability Před 2 lety +130

    Love watching Jordan hold his head as he tries to understand quantum mechanics and hears why consciousness doesn’t play a role.

    • @mushfiqurrahman1107
      @mushfiqurrahman1107 Před 2 lety +2

      haha

    • @shalin.khatri
      @shalin.khatri Před 2 lety

      💀💀💀💀

    • @8utton
      @8utton Před 2 lety +15

      Laughable. Tests have been done where the conscious observer not being present at the test is asked to imagine observing the test and seeing the outcome actually affected the test more than a thousand miles away, Done hundreds of times. More to reality than physics alone and can be proved all along the chain from physics, to chemistry, to biology, to psychology, and conscientious. Very narrow-minded and the pursuit of truth requires an open mind. That's real scientific inquiry.

    • @moatef1886
      @moatef1886 Před 2 lety +24

      @@8utton Please define "conscious observer" in physics terminology we can agree upon if you want to insist that "consciousness" plays a role in quantum mechanics.

    • @alonnie1919
      @alonnie1919 Před 2 lety +32

      @@8utton Would you providea source for this information? It's the first time I'm hearing this and I'm currently doing quantum mechanics for my course, so it'd be a very interesting read.

  • @travisacton2121
    @travisacton2121 Před 2 lety +103

    You can tell Jordan is in learning mode grasping every word he says the show of respect is amazing

    • @justynpryce
      @justynpryce Před 2 lety +14

      If by respect you mean ignoring Penrose and responding with just complete misunderstanding, to the point that Penrose looks at Jordan and basically says, "what the fuck are you talking about?" Jordan was so consumed by these misunderstandings that he ignored what Penrose had to say, and he latches on to the fact that we don't know the true answer to feel justified in his beliefs. The amount of cognitive dysphoria that Jordan has here is insane.
      It was just really weird to watch.

    • @fermisurface2616
      @fermisurface2616 Před 2 lety +6

      @@justynpryce my thoughts exactly. Penrose was irritated nearly the entire time.

    • @nom6758
      @nom6758 Před 2 lety +3

      "learning mode" *monologues about presuposed ideology* so can you answer my "question" ?

    • @braidena1633
      @braidena1633 Před 2 lety +12

      @@justynpryce i can only imagine JBP struggling with physics topics since he struggles with psychology so much. Propelled to fame only by twenty-something gamer males who think he's awesome because he's a little bit edgy.

    • @minhuang8848
      @minhuang8848 Před 2 lety +4

      @@justynpryce Yeah lmao, "show of respect" dude is biting his tongue because JBP is struggling with all manners of aphasia right in front of him. This is painful to watch if you don't know the first thing about what Penrose is talking about, it's some kind of torture spell if you get how much ass-air good old Jordan is trying to waft in Roger's direction. This is pretty much the stark opposite of "learning mode." This is "pack it in boys, we'll never get there"-mode at best.

  • @RnBLover1997
    @RnBLover1997 Před rokem

    It's interesting that many experts regardless of domain have different views and descriptions of processes.

  • @c.galindo9639
    @c.galindo9639 Před 6 měsíci

    An interesting concept to imagine and the age old mystery of matter and meaning in the universe.
    What does it constitute for us to learn such knowledge and what will the implications be to further delve into a magnificent concept that perplexes, expands, and boggles the minds of individuals who want to reach the pinnacle understanding of what functions in the universe and how we are to function in the universe

  • @ben-cb5er
    @ben-cb5er Před 2 lety +3

    Sir Roger Penrose thank you for sharing your knowledge, thoughts and ideas....you are simply amazing!!! ❤

  • @rules4life337
    @rules4life337 Před rokem +8

    I really enjoy it when this man talks. There is straightforward wisdom in his speeches.

  • @Melaki22
    @Melaki22 Před rokem +1

    Hey guys you really should look up Bernardo Kastrup and Arthur Schopenhauer. He talks about quantum mechanics and it's relationship to the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer. In short: Schopenhauer saw that the driving force behind the universe is the will. For example, if you try to take away the live of any living creature it will do everything it possibly can to survive. The will to live is the driving force behind everything, it's a metaphysical force not just in animals and human beings or plants but also the force at a quantum level. The will is blind and drives the universe, but that doesn't necessarily mean that it is unconscious - Kastrup explains why in his interviews. You cant mesure the will because it's metaphysical, you just can observe how it manifests itself, that's why physicians fail to understand it because they try to explain the phenomenon through physics. If you once understand the nature of the pure will things like quantum mechanics start to make sense and can be explained. Schopenhauers philosophy is really very useful and leads to similar conclusions like buddhist philosophy.
    Jordan Peterson really should interview Bernardo Kastrup, he's a brilliant guy. In field, where physics or natural sciences fail to explain the universe philosophy is the best approach to begin with. Every science and understanding of the world emerged from philosophy. Combine matematics and physics with philosophy and you will have a much better approach on things like quantum mechanics rather than with applying just pure physics.

  • @normanespinozaCR
    @normanespinozaCR Před rokem

    Thanks you for share your knowledge!!

  • @Jnglfvr
    @Jnglfvr Před 2 lety +13

    Roger Penrose is a living legend.

  • @johnq63
    @johnq63 Před 2 lety +5

    I would truly love more metaphysics content dr. peterson!
    Your thoughts on the discipline would be very interesting!

  • @kieferonline
    @kieferonline Před rokem

    Excellent video here! Love everything about it.