Helgoland Rovelli, Erica (cat reading book .TXT) 📖
Book online «Helgoland Rovelli, Erica (cat reading book .TXT) 📖». Author Rovelli, Erica
*In the Many Worlds interpretation, every time I observe an event, there is “another me” who observes something different. In Bohm’s theory, only one of the two components of ψ includes me: the other is empty. The relational interpretation disconnects what I observe from what another observer observes: if I am the cat, I am asleep or awake, but this does not prevent interference phenomena, because there is no element of reality actualized with respect to other observers that would limit such interference. The observation I have made is an event relative to me, not to others.
*Two variables have relative information if they can be in fewer states than the product of the number of states that each can be in.
*This is an example of tetralemma, the form of logic used by Nāgārjuna.
*An example of this attitude is Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature Is Almost Certainly False, a book that obsessively repeats: “It does not seem possible to me.” On a careful reading, I find that it doesn’t offer any convincing argument to sustain its thesis, but rather declares ignorance, incomprehension and, especially, explicit lack of interest in the natural sciences.
*There are, of course, many lines of thought that take inspiration from or are rooted in quantum physics, more or less seriously. I find fascinating, to mention only one example, Karen Barad’s utilization of the ideas of Niels Bohr in Meeting the Universe Halfway (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007) and “Posthumanist Performativity: Toward an Understanding of How Matter Comes to Matter,” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 28 (2003), 801–31.
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