Grib, Andrej A. Quantum Cosmology, the Role of the Observer, Quantum Logic."
The central argument in
Andrej Gribs paper is that temporal existence, i.e., movement through time,
allows the human mind to obtain information about the universe governed by
quantum physics. The universe is
characterized by non-standard logic (non-Boolean logic), whereas we interpret
the universe in terms of ordinary (Boolean) logic. Thus we must experience events successively as past, present and
future in order to gain knowledge of the objective but incompatible
(non-commuting) character of nature.
Using this basic argument, Grib speculates about World Consciousness and
suggests how quantum cosmology can provide plausibility arguments for Orthodox
Christian theology.
Grib begins by describing
several key interpretations of quantum physics. According to Niels Bohr, complementary quantum phenomena lack
independent reality since the measurement apparatus and the quantum object form
an indivisible whole. John Von Neumann
interpreted the collapse of the wave packet during measurement as a process
without a physical cause. Instead it is
due to the consciousness of the observer, conceived as an abstract self. For Fritz London and Edmond Bauer the key
feature of consciousness is introspection, not abstract ego, giving the problem
a more objective character. Eugene
Wigner developed this argument further by proposing that any living system
could have the capacity to collapse the wave function.
The next step in Gribs
account was taken by John Bell whose famous theorem forces us to chose between
idealism (in which quantum objects with non-commuting properties only exist
when observed) and realism (in which quantum objects with non-commuting
properties have a qualified existence independent of observation). Still the latter is far from naive realism
for, even admitting the qualified existence of quantum objects (objects
characterized by non-Boolean logic), the existence of macroscopic objects in
nature (objects characterized by Boolean logic) is the direct result of
observation.
Grib now turns to the
problem of quantum cosmology where, as a quantum theory, one faces the
fundamental problem of measurement: who
is the observer? Clearly to speak here
about a self-originating universe and an objectively contingent universe is
misleading, since the existence of the universe per se now requires an external observer. Grib proposes that we opt instead for the
qualified existence afforded by quantum logic and apply this to cosmology. Thus, given that quantum logic involves
conjunctions and disjunctions which do not
satisfy the distributivity law, in order for our (Boolean) minds to grasp the
(non-Boolean) quantum cosmos we must experience the world through temporal sequence. Each event in the sequence is a different
Boolean substructure (which is
accessible to us) of the overall non-Boolean universe (which is not accessible). Thus the temporality of the world arises out
of our mental processes, which integrate our Boolean experiences with physical,
non-Boolean, structures.
Email
link | Printer-friendly | Feedback | Contributed by: CTNS/Vatican Observatory
|