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07-09-2003, 11:06 AM | #21 | |||||||
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07-09-2003, 11:10 AM | #22 | ||
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07-09-2003, 11:59 AM | #23 |
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Actually experimentally it has been shown to not be random. It's not that we can't find the position of each and every electron. It's that we don't have the time to. We could quite easily model every element on the periodic table, and every compound that we could make with them, but again don't have that much time. The quantum that you want science to do is impractical.
In the end though, it still doesn't prove that your god exists. Your implication that there is an ordered system from a random system is complete rubish. Sub-atomic particles, elements, molecules, the whole way up to the entire universe has the same level of randomness. Your argument is that what we know of quantum is wrong, and that it is actually random, I would like to know where you got this. I said spectroscopy, I would like to know what you used to find the randomness. Oh, wait, that would be spectroscopy. Please tell me where you got this randomness from. Spectroscopy? Are you an electron or did you use spectroscopy? Wait perhaps you utilized spectroscopy. Spectroscopy is the only way you would know, and it says not random. |
07-09-2003, 02:08 PM | #24 | |
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Normal - I'm curious...have many physics classes have you actually had? You continue to make assertions that were settled in my first modern physics class.
Regarding the opening post, just because an individual cause cannot be found for every event at the quantum level doesn't prove your point. The underlying probabilities that govern quantum phenomena do exactly that--govern quantum phenomena. There are rules to this stuff; yes, there is an extremely small chance that an electron in my body is in China right now, but my overall position is fixed. Also, what "aparent order" are you wanted reason for? In mathematics, order arises out of chaos frequently. You're confusing randomness and probability. With dealing with macroscopic things, the energy levels are so high that the quantum effects vanish, so we can deterministically know where a baseball is going to fall when it's thrown in the air. Incidentally, a correct interpretation of quantum mechanics is a very strong argument against your god (assuming that you believe in the god of traditional xianity). QM precludes the existence of an omniscient being; the precise position and momentum of these particles cannot be known. God has no knowledge of nature at the most fundamental level. Quote:
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07-09-2003, 04:56 PM | #25 |
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I was refering to relative postion. Experiments like XRD crystal data, and various spectroscopic and thermal data give us what the objects look like. Then we model them with quantum, and the model looks like the data. So, we except our model.
Our big problem is still the heisenburg uncertainty principle(HUP). We can measure postition and measure the momentum, and visa versa. We can stop electons and measure where they are, or figure out how fast and in what direction they are moving, but not all of that at once. Phosphorous paper will give you postion and an object where the slits on discs spin around on a metal rod at different speeds and there is a detector at the end gives us momentum (I forget the name of the apparatus at this time). There was a paper recently hinting that a way has possibly be found to beat the HUP. The question still stands how does normal know that these things are random? Unless he's beaten the HUP he can't say whether electrons move randomly or not. I suspect he is trying to exploit the uncertainty argument - that since we don't know which slit the photon will come out of, it must be god that it forms the lines on the phosphorescent paper when we shoot many photons at it. |
07-09-2003, 05:34 PM | #26 | |||||||
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07-09-2003, 05:42 PM | #27 | ||||
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Don't you mean "position or momentum?" Quote:
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I agree with you statement about Normal trying to exploit the UP, but he doesn't seem to understand what it really means. |
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07-09-2003, 05:50 PM | #28 | |
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It means we can know the position of an electron but not the momentum, or vice versa, meaning one of these is completely unpredictible, meaning the electrons behave in a random (causeless) fashion. In regards to the OP, you could just say "I don't know" if you don't know. That doesn't make you a dirty theist. Here is a site that explains one option science has of explaining the apparently random system. You don't have to attack me by claiming I don't know what I'm talking about. |
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07-09-2003, 05:55 PM | #29 | |||||
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You didn't answer my question about how much physics you've had. This is relevent as you will see below.
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Wrong again. Uncertainty implies uncertainty not randomness. It means we can be uncertain to a certain extent, not that it's totally random. |
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07-09-2003, 06:04 PM | #30 | ||||||
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