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What are the main problems that we need to solve to prove Laplace's determinism correct and overcome the Uncertainty principle?

Qmechanic
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pablasso
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    As far as I know, quantum mechanics is not to be overcome. It is a feature of our universe (which includes the uncertainty principle). – r_31415 Nov 02 '10 at 19:56
  • You might want to change the title as well, since "Theory of Everything" refers to something quite different from what you ask in the body. – j.c. Nov 02 '10 at 20:23
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    that QM is a feature of the universe is opinable. Even its founding fathers believed it to be a temporary theory. It also doesn't play nice with gravitation and it has not been extended yet with anything sensible. It could be a feature of the universe, but it's not clear-cut that it is. Any successful theory seems right, but may be fundamentally wrong (see Newton's law of gravitation) – Sklivvz Nov 07 '10 at 15:01
  • To answer the question in the title: I don't think it ever will be, and if it is possible, it makes for a pretty boring world. –  Nov 08 '10 at 14:46
  • Closely related: https://physics.stackexchange.com/a/762425/226902 – Quillo May 03 '23 at 17:15

6 Answers6

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Laplace's determinism is not physically correct over long periods of time. That is, it neglects chaos/"sensitive dependence on initial conditions"/exponential growth of microscopic perturbations already in Newtonian dynamics, which was seriously thought about only in the 20th century. Being true, this also will not be overcome. Stochasticity enters some classical dynamical paths with time.

There is subtlety here. In classical mechanics, or the evolution of the wave function, there is a kind of microdeterminism, so that what occurs in the next instant is fully determined by what occurred up until that point. It is in the longer time evolution of a chaotic system that stochasticity creeps in.

By the way, Lapalace said "We ought to regard the present state of the universe as the effect of its antecedent state and as the cause of the state that is to follow." This part remains true in chaotic classical mechanics.

However, he then continued "An intelligence knowing all the forces acting in nature at a given instant, as well as the momentary positions of all things in the universe, would be able to comprehend in one single formula the motions of the largest bodies as well as the lightest atoms in the world, provided that its intellect were sufficiently powerful to subject all data to analysis; to it nothing would be uncertain, the future as well as the past would be present to its eyes. The perfection that the human mind has been able to give to astronomy affords but a feeble outline of such an intelligence. (Laplace 1820)" This is the part that classical chaos invalidates.

You might also read http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/determinism-causal/

Finally, there are also questions whether, in light of general relativity, black holes, etc, we can even speak of a "state of the universe as a whole" There may not be such a god's eye view altogether. These issues need a philosophy forum, however.

sigoldberg1
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    Laplace's demon would not be troubled by chaos: if it knew the exact initial conditions, there would be no exponential growth of error (there would be no error). – Seamus Nov 05 '10 at 18:11
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    sigoldberg1 and Seamus's remarks about Laplace apply if the world is described by real numbers. The problem with real numbers is that they each require infinite sets of digits. If you can't control the millionth digit you will have indeterminism. This problem would not arise if we would have theories based only on integers, or even better, bounded integers. – G. 't Hooft Nov 08 '12 at 09:39
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If you want a minority's view on this subject, here it is:

Determinism means that one asks for a theory that describes unambiguously what is going on, without even the slightest amount of fuzziness. Of course, fuzziness may come in at a later stage, when we inevitably are confronted with the fact that we do not know exactly how nature's laws work under all circumstances, and also we do not know with infinite precision what state the universe is in at any moment in time. But in principle, the theory should be razor sharp. The theory should only talk about realities, things being there with certainty, or not, also with certainty.

The conclusion of most investigators that there is no reality because we are unable, at present, to describe it, or to measure things with as much accuracy as we would like, is indeed a premature conclusion. It is true that all attempts to attribute all of today's observations on nature's laws to something that is happening 'with certainty', have failed, but this does not mean that one should give up. The statement you often hear, that quantum mechanics is a fact, it will stay with us forever, and it means that there will never be a deterministic theory, is premature because that discussion is still far from closed.

It so happened, that a very convincing argument was put up in the 1960s by John Bell. He "proved" that the outcomes of some cleverly designed experiments, as predicted by quantum mechanics and indeed later confirmed experimentally, cannot possibly be reproduced in theories that assume the existence of "reality". The experiments themselves are of course "real", but you can ask what the outcome would be if, during the experiment, suddenly the setting was modified. The modification, it was said, cannot affect the outcome of measurements done sufficiently far away, and then, a contradiction is arrived at.

Does this mean that "reality" does not exist? According to most who investigated this, this is indeed the case, but I do not agree. "Counterfactual" observations are observations that actually are not made, because they are standing in the way of observations that can be made. To demand that these must have a well-defined outcome because otherwise your theory does not describe reality, is debatable. In fact, I now know for certain that this is incorrect, but my arguments fail to come across.

Anyway, my claim is that theories can be made that exclusively describe reality without even the slightest amount of fuzziness, but only if you understand how they relate to the world that we are accustomed to. You do have to give up a lot: neither atoms, nor waves, not even quantized fields, can be used to describe reality; instead, it is the most minute pieces of information roaming about in gigantic numbers in the universe, that do describe reality. Today's understanding of the physical world is not adequate to grasp this situation entirely. In the mean time, the theory of quantum mechanics, as it is today, stands out as a thing of beauty, enabling us better than anything else to describe the behavior of atoms, electrons and the other subatomic particles, as accurately as possible, but with limitations that are closely related to our limited IQ. There's fuzziness, but whether this fuzziness will be there forever, only the future can tell.

G. 't Hooft
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  • I don't agree that most investigators conclude that there is no reality. It's just that reality is not reality where particles have definite position, momentum, spin, and so on. – MBN Nov 06 '12 at 14:34
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    Indeed, I should have stated more clearly that I mean local reality, and that this should be interpreted in a completely classical sense. But, as you say, this "reality" is not about particles with position, momentum, etc. My minority view is that there is a loophole in the arguments usually employed against local reality. – G. 't Hooft Nov 07 '12 at 18:30
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Laplace's determinism is fine if you do no longer consider x(t) as the function you want to deterministically describe but accept the fact that only the wave function $\psi(x,t)$ is deterministic - and even that only when you neglect QFT effects.

Tobias Kienzler
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Experiments such as the double-slit, EPR and Bell inequality experiments show that quantum mechanics is not just a computational tool, but a genuine property of nature. In this sense, Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle cannot be overcome and there will be no reversal to determinism.

Marton Trencseni
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    Yet, Shrödinger equation is perfectly deterministic -- what Heisenberg rule deny is getting full information of the initial condition. –  Nov 02 '10 at 22:15
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    Those experiments show that some features of QM are actually fact. They do not determine that the QM description of reality is actually correct - there are a bunch of things that don't make much sense in QM, but are accepted since the theory works so well. – Sklivvz Nov 03 '10 at 11:37
  • @Skilvvz: They show that it is fundamentally impossible to "know" the initial conditions for any system because there is either "real" randomness or non-locality of hidden variables, and any successor theory to QM must maintain the same results (though it could be based on some "deeper" truth). Saying that they allow for QM to be incorrect is true but of no consequence. – dmckee --- ex-moderator kitten Dec 02 '10 at 02:22
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    @mbq: The uncertainty is not in the initial condition, or in any hidden variables. This is a false interpretation of quantum mechanics that is for some reason persistent. – Ron Maimon Nov 04 '12 at 22:48
  • @RonMaimon There is no uncertainty at all; have you seen any stochastic terms in SE? The problem is that the exact solution is obtainable only for the whole universe, and we can only investigate subsets of it under false isolation assumption. –  Nov 05 '12 at 02:26
  • @mbq: Ok, that's Everett, and I'm fine with Everett. The issue is that the wavefunction is then physical and enormous, super-duper huge, beyond anything one can contemplate, but that's the only problem. It's either what t'Hooft says, or this. – Ron Maimon Nov 05 '12 at 03:47
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There are no problems we can solve to overcome the uncertainty principle. We can't overcome it. Because it is like 1 + 1 = 2. Its mathematical fact and has got nothing to do with physics.

General uncertainty relation between two operators $\hat{A},\hat{B}$ is

$\sigma_A \sigma_B \geq \frac{|\langle [ \hat{A} \hat{B}] \rangle|}{2} $

when you plug in position $\hat{x}$ and momentum $\hat{p}$ operator in this equation,

we get

$\sigma_x \sigma_p \geq \frac{\hbar}{2}$

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    This is only true as long as the QM view of the world is correct. There is no experiment that "proves" that the mathematical foundation of e.g. using operators for measurements is actually a "fundamental" property of nature. – Sklivvz Nov 07 '10 at 15:04
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Determinism as more to worry about stochastic and chaotic processes than with the Heisenberg's uncertainty principle.

As a simple proof, you can easily consider a purely classical system and observe that you don't have determinism as Laplace had hopped.

Cedric H.
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