pull down to refresh
10 sats \ 3 replies \ @south_korea_ln OP 27 Nov \ parent \ on: Can Quantum Computers Solve the Many-Body Puzzle? Physicists Develop New Metric science
:)
I used to read a lot of books on how to interpret quantum mechanics (think many-worlds, etc). All very interesting things to think about, but for practical use in my daily life, I'm fully content with just thinking of it as a probability of outcomes. Same thing with how I think about freewill. In all likeliness, there is no freewill, but I am content with thinking there is freewill and I am charge of my destiny. It's too depressing otherwise.
All this to say that I don't worry too much about the philosophical interpretations of the world and the universe. Until we can bring these considerations into the real world using tangible experiments, that is.
Still, all very fun to read about in my free time.
Yes, the problem is being caught in a world of only tangible experiments and tangible anything else. There are too many intangibles in the world to deny them. Is consciousness one of them, intangibles, that is?
reply
I'm fully ok with saying "I don't know" as a scientist (I say that at least a few times a week to students and colleagues during discussions). Lots of things that were intangible have become tangible over time, so I believe there are even more such transitions to come in centuries ahead. I like to observe these intangibles, and ponder about them, but I specifically try to avoid making definite claims. I don't need a higher power (God, etc) to make sense of them, I just accept them as things we can't explain yet (or may never be able to explain). I'm happy with this worldview, it works for me. And it may not work for others.
reply
The "I don't know." part always works. Some things are just beyond our ken. Although, it is kind of hard to "observe" intangibles, you can ponder them but observation is very difficult.
reply