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The Conscious Universe: Parts and Wholes in Physical Reality PDF

192 Pages·1999·9.53 MB·English
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The Conscious Universe Springer Science+Business Media, LLC Menas Kafatos Robert Nadeau The Conscious Universe Parts and Wholes in Physical Reality With 30 Illustrations Springer Menas Kafatos Robert Nadeau Department of Physics Department of English George Mason University George Mason University Fairfax, VA 22030-4444 Fairfax, VA 22030-4444 USA USA Original artwork for the cover and figure illustrations created by Menas Kafatos. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Kafatos, Menas C. The conscious universe : parts and wholes in physical reality / Menas Kafatos, Robert Nadeau. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 978-0-387-98865-8 ISBN 978-1-4612-1308-6 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-4612-1308-6 1. Reality. 2. Physics—Philosophy. 3. Quantum theory. I. Nadeau, Robert, 1944- . II. Title. QC6.4.R42K34 1999 530'.01—dc21 99-15364 Printed on acid-free paper. © 2000, 1990 Springer Science+Business Media New York Originally published by Springer-Verlag New York, Inc. in 2000 All rights reserved. This work may not be translated or copied in whole or in part without the writtne permission of the publisher (Springer Science+Business Media, LLC), except for brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis. Use in connection with any form of information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed is forbidden. The use of general descriptive names, trade names, trademarks, etc., in this publication, even if the former are not especially identified, is not to be taken as a sign that such names, as understood yb the Trade Marks and Merchandise Marks Act, may accordingly be used freely by anyone. Production managed by Mary Ann Cottone; manufacturing supervised by Jeffrey Taub. Photocomposed copy prepared using author-supplied WordPerfect files. 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 21 ISBN 978-0-387-98865-8 To Alexios Kafatos, Langdon Nadeau, Lefteris Kafatos, Stefanos Kafatos, and Thalia Kafatou Contents Introduction 1 Physics and Metaphysics.................................................................... 6 Science as a Way of Knowing ............................................................. 8 1. Two Small Clouds: The Emergence of. a New Physics 10 Light and Relativity Theory ............................................................... 12 Entering the Realm of the Unvisualizable........................................ 17 The Rise of Quantum Theory ............................................................. 20 A New View of Atoms ......................................................................... 23 Waves as Particles and Particles as Waves ........................... ........... 27 The New Logical Framework of Complementarity.......................... 31 2. The Strange New World of the Quantum: Wave-particle Dualism 33 The Two-Slit Experiment ................................................................... 38 Planck's Constant ............................................................................... 42 Quantum Probabilities and Statistics ............................................... 45 The Schrodinger Cat Paradox............................................................ 47 Quantum Field Theory ....................................................................... 50 3. Confronting a New Fact of Nature: Bell's Theorem and the Aspect and Gisin Experiments 56 The EPR Thought Experiment .......................................................... 58 A More Detailed Account of Experiments Testing Bell's Theorem 61 Results of Experiments Testing Bell's Theory .................................. 65 History of Experiments Testing Bell's Theorem............................... 67 Confronting a New Fact of Nature .................................................... 70 viii Contents 4. Changing the Rules: A New Epistemology of Science 72 Realism Versus Idealism in the Quantum World............................. 76 Complementarity and Objectivity ..................................................... 77 The Need to Use Classical Concepts.................................................. 79 CI and the Experiments Testing Bell's Theorem ............................. 82 Complementarity and the Language of Mathematics...................... 84 5. The Logic of Nature: Complementarity and the New Biology 90 Part and Whole in Darwinian Theory.. .............................. ............... 92 Part-Whole Complementarity in Microbial Life ............................... 94 Part-Whole Complementarities in Complex Living Systems .......... 96 Emergence in the Whole ofthe Biota.. ... .... ....................................... 98 Competition Versus Cooperation Within Species............................. 99 Competition Versus Cooperation between Species ........................... 101 6. Ancient Whispers: The Expanding Universe 105 The Hot Big Bang Theory. .................................................................. 107 Problems with Big Bang Theory................. ..................... .................. 110 Inflation as the Solution to the Big Bang Problems ......................... 115 7. The Emergence of a New Vision: The Unfolding Universe 119 The Universe as a Quantum System ................................................. 121 The Observational Problem in Cosmology......... ..... .......... .... ....... ..... 123 Nonlocality and Cosmology ................................................................ 125 Three Types of Nonlocalities .............................................................. 127 Complementarity and Cosmology...................................................... 129 8. Quantum Ontologies: Metaphysics in Modern Physics 134 The Quest for a New Ontology ........................................................... 135 The New Epistemology in a Philosophical Context .......................... 140 Parallels with Eastern Metaphysics .................................................. 141 Contents ix 9. The Ceremony of Innocence: Physics, Metaphysics, and the Dialog between Science and Religion 143 Physics and Seventeenth-Century Metaphysics ............................... 144 Metaphysics and Classical Physics................................. ... ...... .......... 148 Einstein and the Positivists .................................................... ........... 149 Einstein's View .................................................................................... 151 Philosophical Implications of Nonlocality ......................................... 153 Parts and Wholes in Physical Reality ............................................... 155 The Conscious Universe ..................................................................... 157 Consciousness and the Single Significant Whole ............................. 15B A New Dialog Between Science and Religion ................................... 160 Appendix. Horizons of Knowledge in Cosmological Models 162 Hypothesis of Large-Scale Complementarities ................................. 166 Quantum Resolution of Cosmological Measurement Problems ....... 169 Notes 172 Introduction............................................................ ............... .......... .... 172 Chapter 1 ............................................................................................. 172 Chapter 2 ............................................................................................. 173 Chapter 3 ............................................................................................. 173 Chapter 4 ............................................................................................. 174 Chapter 5 ............................................................................................. 175 Chapter 6 .............................................................................................. 177 Chapter 7 ....................................................................................... ...... 177 Chapter B. ...•.................................................................................•...... 17B Chapter 9 ................................................................ ............................. 179 Appendix. ............................................................................................. 1BO Index 181 Introduction Imagine that two people have been chosen to be observers in a scien tific experiment involving two photons, or quanta of light. These pho tons originate from a single source and travel in opposite directions an equal distance halfway across the known universe to points where each will be measured or observed. Now suppose that before the pho tons are released, one observer is magically transported to a point of observation halfway across the known universe and the second ob server is magically transported to another point an equal distance in the opposite direction.·The task of the observers is to record or meas ure a certain property of each photon with detectors located at the two points so that the data gathered at each can later be compared. Even though the photons are traveling from the source at the speed of light, each observer would have to wait billions of years for one of the photons to arrive at his observation point. Suppose, how ever, that the observers are willing to endure this wait because they hope to test the predictions of a mathematical theorem. This theorem not only allows for the prospect that there could be a correlation be tween the observed properties of the two photons but also indicates that this correlation could occur instantly, or in no time, in spite of the fact that the distance between the observers and their measuring instruments is billions of light years. Now imagine that after the ob servations are made, the observers are magically transported back to the source of the experiment and the observations recorded by each are compared. The result of our imaginary experiment is that the ob served properties of the two photons did, in fact, correlate with one another over this fast distance instantly, or in no time, and the re searchers conclude that the two photons remained in communication with one another in spite of this distance. This imaginary experiment distorts some of the more refmed as pects of the actual experiments in which photons released from a sin gle source are measured or correlated over what physicists term space-like separated regions. But if we assume that the imaginary experiment was conducted many times, there is good reason to be lieve that the results would be the same as those in the actual experiments. Also like the imaginary experiment, the actual experi ments were designed to test some predictions made in a mathemati cal theorem. M. Kafatos et al., The Conscious Universe © Springer-Verlag New York, Inc. 2000

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