What is Real? | Adam Becker | Talks at Google

Adam Becker, PhD is an astrophysicist and science writer. His new book What Is Real? explores the history of quantum foundations and the questions that remain to be answered.
Get the book: goo.gl/s2NGWM

Пікірлер: 110

  • @markszlazak
    @markszlazak5 жыл бұрын

    Adam Becker’s book was highly recommended by the physicist and respected philosopher of physics, Professor Tim Maudlin.

  • @jeffreyharrison3731

    @jeffreyharrison3731

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the views of Becker and Maudlin align rather well with the interpretation of the history of QM. I think both of them would agree that non-locality was a bigger issue for Einstein than hidden variables, And I think both point out that Bohm's pilot wave theory was deterministic and non-local - refuting Van Neumann. They might have different affinities toward String Theory, MWI, and operational collapse, however.

  • @lcweiss7
    @lcweiss75 жыл бұрын

    This guy Adam Becker is an extremely talented writer (I could not put his book down and I highly recommend it to anyone reading this) and also an extremely talented lecturer (I think I´ve probably watched this youtube lecture a hundred times already, lol )...

  • @RagingGeekazoid
    @RagingGeekazoid2 жыл бұрын

    There needs to be a bifurcation in PhD-level physics education between foundations and applications. Shut-up-and-calculate physicists don't need to know much philosophy because they're really just glorified engineers. They're not supposed to think outside of the box, they're just trying to describe the box because it's an insanely complicated box. Students of the foundations need to know different ways of thinking, different ontologies, the history and dynamics of theoretical research, and anything else that will help them break out of the current mindset and discover the next one.

  • @yacc1706

    @yacc1706

    Жыл бұрын

    Good idea!

  • @kddk8584
    @kddk85846 жыл бұрын

    Good overview of his book. I've read it twice and I really enjoyed it. This guy gets quantum mechanics...

  • @mladen9319
    @mladen93196 жыл бұрын

    What a delightful talk. Thanks!

  • @idontknow-ms8mc
    @idontknow-ms8mc6 жыл бұрын

    I did not completely understand this talk, but oddly enough, I want to read his book and learn more about this topic.

  • @pedrogo4903

    @pedrogo4903

    5 жыл бұрын

    K 2 do not read ,its stupid

  • @jayarava

    @jayarava

    4 жыл бұрын

    Did you read it? I did and found it fascinating.

  • @abinashlaik

    @abinashlaik

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jayarava Same, sir. It was fascinating for me as well.

  • @SaveriusTianhui
    @SaveriusTianhui5 жыл бұрын

    Read your book recently--- Great book Adam

  • @kA-dc6zq
    @kA-dc6zq7 ай бұрын

    It's one of the most meaningful lectures I have ever listened. I'm reading Adam's book and this lecture was a good complementary for me to understand quantum physics better. Today, as I was cycling in the desert, an idea came to my mind. If there are at least two states for Schrodinger car, one dead and one alive, the whole nature that I saw today as I was cycling could be in infinite other states among which one is perceivable to me!! Because the wave function underlies the whole universe.

  • @mb2776

    @mb2776

    4 күн бұрын

    your theory is descibed as the empty branch problem of the pilot wave theory or in other words, the many worlds interpretation. while I do adore the many worlds interpretation, there's no reason that possible branches the particle could travel on, should exists. That's a misinterpretation of quantum physics, biased by the copenhagen interpretation. We observe empty fields in nature all the time, like no current between two electric poles etc. The possible brances a particle can take in the double slit experiment isn't real in a sense, it's just possible to take in way if the particle started in another place from the beginning. there are no empty branches in reality, the empty branch is as possible as you falling thru the floor right now.

  • @mushfiqurrahman1107
    @mushfiqurrahman11073 жыл бұрын

    is there any free PDF available of his book? help would be appreciated. (I was searching his book but couldn't find)

  • @ivan8960
    @ivan89605 жыл бұрын

    brilliant talk!

  • @hense408
    @hense4085 жыл бұрын

    this is aweseome

  • @tabordizon
    @tabordizon Жыл бұрын

    His book was quite captivating. It definitely gave me a new understanding of Theoretical Quantum Physics.

  • @SunShine-xc6dh
    @SunShine-xc6dh Жыл бұрын

    Is gyger counter not a measurement device. Is the circuit to the hammer not an observer

  • @jps0117
    @jps0117 Жыл бұрын

    What a great book. I've read it twice, and that's unusual for me.

  • @stephaneberrebi7106
    @stephaneberrebi71064 жыл бұрын

    based on the difference between noumena and phenomena from Critique of the Pure Reason, the Copenhagen interpretation should rename QM : Kantum mechanics !

  • @jayarava
    @jayarava4 жыл бұрын

    I'm with Einstein. Any equation in physics that gives two possible answers and no way to distinguish between them is incomplete at best, no matter how accurate.

  • @jeffreyharrison3731

    @jeffreyharrison3731

    Жыл бұрын

    If you can't get completeness and consistency in formal systems powerful enough to produce Peano arithmetic), then how can you get it in physics? Hawkings invoked Godel's theorem to argue that a complete and consistent TOE may not be possible, for example, but I am unaware if the Incompleteness theorem can be applied to the measurement problem, however.

  • @kenanderson7769
    @kenanderson77692 жыл бұрын

    Becker is quite a good speaker and covers are lot of difficult ideas. I like his inclusive approach eg philosophy and science being part of understanging reality. I deleted my previouis comment which was not intended for this video, must have been switching between worlds and missed the target.

  • @danielash1704
    @danielash1704 Жыл бұрын

    Great working out the flaws in a way and the answers in the web really an all hands on key boards and check the updated science's book's of resent findings and press print please

  • @solowinterwolf
    @solowinterwolf5 жыл бұрын

    I will buy and read this book, but the running potshot at evolutionary psych is curious; it's a branch of science that is now as well-supported as quantum field theory. I refer the audience to the fine work by Leda Cosmides and others in founding this area that remains full of promise.

  • @illClintonDuval

    @illClintonDuval

    4 жыл бұрын

    I’m not to that part yet.. but honestly, evo-psych has a questionable reputation among scientists. I believe Richard Carrier has a blog piece about this topic.

  • @FallenStarFeatures
    @FallenStarFeatures2 ай бұрын

    @37:48 Becker: "Then [Bell] says... there's something else funny about Bohm's version of quantum physics. It has this spooky action at a distance. The position of a particle way over here can instantaneously affect the behavior of a pilot wave way over here." This is a mischaracterization of both Bohmian Mechanics and of Bell's commentary. As Becker explained earlier, in BM, pilot waves guide the movements of particles. However, there is no mechanism by which a particle's position can influence the behavior of its pilot wave, instantaneously or not. The pilot wave that guides the motion of the particle is not "over here" (i.e. separated by some physical distance). Pilot waves do not propagate across physical space-time, they manifest solely in Configuation Space, the complex-valued domain of potentially limitless numbers of dimensions where the quantum wave-function is defined. Becker then shifts gears into philosophical musings, and in doing so, short changes Bohm almost as much as did promoters of the Copenhagen Interpretation. What Becker glossed over was the main conclusion of Von Neumann's erroneous proof: the claim that quantum mechanics rules out ALL hidden variable theories, such as Bohmian Mechanics. What Bell discovered was that it is only LOCAL hidden variable theories that are ruled out, but NOT the non-local Pilot Wave theory of Bohm. Bell's Theorem actually vindicates Bohmian Mechanics, as did the recent Nobel Prize-winning experiments that confirmed Bell's predictions. Becker's historical account of quantum mechanics is nevertheless quite compelling. What happened next was even more provocative: kzread.info/dash/bejne/hqp4pa-MacXRZ5c.html

  • @user-sr5jy6be2v
    @user-sr5jy6be2v2 жыл бұрын

    really good book

  • @srghma
    @srghma Жыл бұрын

    I thought I will find quick algorithm to predict experiment outcomes - understanding

  • @jeffreyharrison3731
    @jeffreyharrison3731 Жыл бұрын

    Great talk, Adam. Thank you. Objective collapse theories that invoke gravity for objective state collapse of superposition like the Diosi-Penrose (DP model) are not holding up well under experimental conditions. I guess just the essentially irrefutable interpretations like Copenhagen and MWI are still in play. Perhaps modern physicists should employ Newton's famous words: Hypotheses non fingo.

  • @danielash1704
    @danielash1704 Жыл бұрын

    The cat is dead in the box and alive until you open it. 😂Yes🙄

  • @jc6830
    @jc68304 жыл бұрын

    1:05:22 I don’t know

  • @yacc1706
    @yacc1706 Жыл бұрын

    Adam, please revise figure A.1b and the text that explain it, from your book. I think is incorrect. If both paths have the same length, all light must go to detector 2. BTW, I think is better avoid the "explanation": "a single photon will interfere with itself", a la Wheeler!, not to keep the misleading. Very good talk, I am personally very interested in THIS history, but as a Tim Maudlin follower, I would like these popularizations had a correct and precise language! Go on! It is "necessary" more people know about this history

  • @MrRyansittler
    @MrRyansittler5 жыл бұрын

    Google. Why are we looking at the back of people's heads when they ask questions?

  • @yacc1706
    @yacc1706 Жыл бұрын

    24:18 caution! Not "not correct" but "not complete"

  • @rodgerrabbit3160
    @rodgerrabbit31604 жыл бұрын

    I don't know what to do right this second,but someone or something should be contacting me any second in some kind of way

  • @jeffreyharrison3731

    @jeffreyharrison3731

    Жыл бұрын

    The cosmic police are attempting to contact you for parking perpendicularly in a parallel universe.

  • @rodgerrabbit3160
    @rodgerrabbit31604 жыл бұрын

    Does the goodness or wrightouesness in you over power the evilness or wrongfulness. Also could either of them be persuaded in any kind of way with some information

  • @phumgwatenagala6606

    @phumgwatenagala6606

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hope you’re ok…

  • @JavierBonillaC
    @JavierBonillaC9 ай бұрын

    Evolutionary Psychollogy has done more for the understanding of human nature in 30 years than philosophy in 2000 years. What are you talking about????? I loved your talk. I've shared it. And then... you say that about Evolutionary Psychology. Disconcerting! It is just darwinian evolution applied to the mind with the help of game theory and computer modeling (which has also been key in understanding plain evolutionary biology). What is your intuition about why that approach could be anything but brilliant? Did Richard Dawins do something to you?

  • @Sharperthanu1
    @Sharperthanu12 жыл бұрын

    No.The wave function IS a thing in the world. If you look at the results from the double slit experiment there are PHYSICAL MARKS on the photo sensitive film at the back of the double slit experiment that PROVE that when no one is watching the experiment photons,electrons or full atoms went through the double slits as waves.

  • @dimitristsagdis7340
    @dimitristsagdis73406 жыл бұрын

    I watched this all the way until the end, but I didn't see 'what is real'.

  • @rk6783

    @rk6783

    6 жыл бұрын

    Dimitris Tsagdis is bug in this video

  • @ankurwadhwa8669

    @ankurwadhwa8669

    6 жыл бұрын

    It's God plan , he doesn't want u to know. lol. Anyhow read the book u will get it , a bit more

  • @joannaa1724

    @joannaa1724

    5 жыл бұрын

    It was so boring. I watched til the end but nothing about answering what is real

  • @DavidKolbSantosh

    @DavidKolbSantosh

    5 жыл бұрын

    My understanding is that the Copenhagen interpretation denies mearurement (observer) independent reality to particles (the world). So, one way to get around the measurement problem is to deny realism, or observer dependent reality. The title is questioning reality its self as we know it.

  • @wdalence

    @wdalence

    5 жыл бұрын

    In order to understand better, you need to learn the theory of entropy chaos and order. The physical world (sensorial) is what we studied believing as real. But what is really making these sensitive world is quantum which is random, unobservable, unmeasurable with our consciousness. That chaos, randomness is expanding energy and that is real. We animals are made of it and affected by it as a part of an ecosystem. Awareness beyond sensorial data collection can help the observation and its effect, but can never be completely controlled, if so will create a new behavior and that can be destructive.

  • @KipIngram
    @KipIngram Жыл бұрын

    5:30 - I don't know why we don't "want" life or consciousness to be involved with it. I see no reason to care one way or the other; I just want "the truth."

  • @wdalence
    @wdalence5 жыл бұрын

    In order to understand better, you need to learn the theory of entropy chaos and order. The physical world (sensorial) is what we studied believing as real. But what is really making these sensitive world is quantum which is random, unobservable, unmeasurable with our consciousness or any mechanic device we could probably create. That chaos, randomness is expanding energy and that is what’s real. We animals are made of it and affected by it as a part of an ecosystem. Awareness beyond sensorial data collection which means trespassing the nervous and endocrine system can help the observation and its effect, but can never be completely controlled, if so will create a new behavior and that can be destructive. Remember it’s all about data collection and storage, our dna is our Cloud connected to the super cloud. We can “download” data and manifest with awareness of pure gray matter. That makes some humans more powerful than others, because they know the coding of the proper frequencies and vibration. Mistics

  • @rodgerrabbit3160

    @rodgerrabbit3160

    4 жыл бұрын

    Does the goodness or wrightousness in you over power the evilness or wrongfulness in you. Also,could either be persuaded with any information or in any kind of way

  • @Wrightley
    @Wrightley6 жыл бұрын

    Appreciate the content. "I am a minority."

  • @hense408
    @hense4085 жыл бұрын

    and after this point.... rewind... hmm... need i say more?

  • @yacc1706
    @yacc1706 Жыл бұрын

    1:08:50 believes about philosophers

  • @danielash1704
    @danielash1704 Жыл бұрын

    Well that spinning wheel is a good example of the plasmsass director ability so is a useful tool to dedcribe a tip of the feather of platforms for scientific evidence to new discoveries. A Closer look at the whole picture we so bias bliss and expertise of covering up discussion about circuit verses wave levels of the measure volumetric frequencies that we count as true could be off by the experience and expertise of mindfulness of the whole picture we see the impacting repeating the past history of the whole picture

  • @ULTD8
    @ULTD86 жыл бұрын

    dont take away my evo psych 1:15:03

  • @illClintonDuval

    @illClintonDuval

    4 жыл бұрын

    Evo-psych needs to clean its house

  • @teenee4
    @teenee46 жыл бұрын

    why we don't sink through chairs is because of electron repulsion :)

  • @rodgerrabbit3160
    @rodgerrabbit31604 жыл бұрын

    I'm far from the smartest,but I am not a dummy. I am real in some kind of way. Therefore I have the question that has all the answers

  • @danielash1704
    @danielash1704 Жыл бұрын

    We would not have the ability of the thing's we find out about the world all over we have to investigate the whole picture and find the correct way of doing thing's a massive body stays at rest untill a single idea comes together we have a turning point in the future as well learning about the controlling of the bodies intention to project is a classic example of the training the brain and memory of the experience is a good ideas and bringing it forth to all is never done till now

  • @paulmartin42
    @paulmartin426 жыл бұрын

    As conspiracy theories go I am relieved that it leads to the rehabilitation of our old friend Einstein. My vote is for Fermat's last theorem since this is far easier to grasp initially and thereafter gets complex; QM is a wing and a prayer from start to finish.

  • @sunray6673
    @sunray66736 жыл бұрын

    God plays dice!

  • @danielash1704
    @danielash1704 Жыл бұрын

    Conscious of the experience and expertise of mindfulness of the whole picture is worth it later to realize that the experiencers own closeness to the natural programming language of all thing's or a multitude of platforms for memory that we seem to have forgotten the law of one size space to buoyancy of atmosphere the space density is a greater chance to see easy the sun's point of size space to leverage of gravity reflections to gravity reflections wavers

  • @yifuxero5408
    @yifuxero540811 ай бұрын

    What is Real? Ans. per Shankara's 788-820 Advaita Vedanta, Pure Consciousness, the Substance (Spinoza's term0 of the universe. I am That, you are That, all this (everything0 is That pure Consciousness. However, logic along won't get you there. One must use specific techniques (many invented by the ancient Buddhists and Hindus), for tapping into and merging with Consciousness. This requires the direct non-dual apprehension of C. in a state that transcends the mind. What collapses wave functions? The entire universe collapses every wave function.

  • @danielash1704
    @danielash1704 Жыл бұрын

    Ok I'll just slowdown in the speed of light then turns out your in for a long didtance ride if you get it right standing still everything else passes by lol that would be a trip to the scientific community

  • @Jbnixa
    @Jbnixa5 жыл бұрын

    For a talk entitled "what is real?" this is wildly incomprehensible.

  • @95GuitarMan13
    @95GuitarMan135 жыл бұрын

    When comparing physicists and philosophers of physics the imbalance is not in the due diligence of the professions as suggested but in the structure of the question being asked. Philosophy of physics is by definition an interdisciplinarian profession and a subset of philosophy, physics is a specialization and an entire field, not a subset. It's more fair to compare all physicists to all philosophers, in which case the imbalance disappears as almost all philosophers know squat about physics. You may ask why physics does not have a subdiscipline devoted to the intersection it shares with philosophy, as philosophy does, but I don't think you'll find many people signing up to study the physics of philosophy. Essentially, physics is in the scope of philosophy, but philosophy is not in the scope of physics.

  • @acetate909
    @acetate9094 жыл бұрын

    The difference between Feynman's cool calm delivery and Beckers clammy clumsy delivery does not favor Becker. I really enjoyed this talk and I enjoy his writing but it would have been wise to make Feynman's point without using that video.

  • @jeffreyharrison3731

    @jeffreyharrison3731

    Жыл бұрын

    Feynman was Feynman and he made a good point about how fundamental knowledge can affect the development of scientific theories. Becker surveyed the history, politics, and philosophy of QM, invoking a number of different texts, theorists, and viewpoints - including Feynman's. Apples and Oranges my friend.

  • @danielash1704
    @danielash1704 Жыл бұрын

    The collapse of the central point of attraction for the minus of thoughts turned on in A probability or distribution impact of other unites States of rest when everything else is in motion responce intelligence controlled almost yourself

  • @danielash1704
    @danielash1704 Жыл бұрын

    If we don't have determined points of vibrational magnetic resonance ultra hi ultra low sound understanding echoes of distances between one the other atoms electricity generation we been sending that clicking out far into the galaxy note that your floating in a density of heavy gas and a multitude of platforms waves that we send into space.

  • @Mrodriguez231
    @Mrodriguez2316 жыл бұрын

    :)

  • @yacc1706
    @yacc1706 Жыл бұрын

    19:43 to 25:40 the myth!

  • @yacc1706
    @yacc1706 Жыл бұрын

    1:03:45 shouldnt ask!

  • @NeilHighley
    @NeilHighley6 жыл бұрын

    Sigh at the attempts by the new agers to pollute science with their supernatural fiction.

  • @GOffUnit

    @GOffUnit

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, object permanence is just so ludicrous.

  • @manudehanoi

    @manudehanoi

    5 жыл бұрын

    if copenhagen wasnt so shitty and widespread there wouldnt be space for new agers to get in

  • @pedrogo4903
    @pedrogo49035 жыл бұрын

    Mooron ,when you " measure" you ate just quantyfing effects over time and a vector( space), and not intrincicly the" thing" himself .You confuse fenomenon with numenon

  • @jeffreyharrison3731

    @jeffreyharrison3731

    Жыл бұрын

    Let's recognize the possibility that Kant was right: the noumenon (thing in itself) is essentially unknowable. Going one step further, it might be time to dissolve the distinction between epistemology and ontology per Deleuze and Zizek.

  • @pedrogo4903

    @pedrogo4903

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jeffreyharrison3731 it´s the two faces of the same coin

  • @dennisalwine4519
    @dennisalwine45195 жыл бұрын

    I couldn't watch the video, had to go audio-only for most of it. The incessant "weebling" by Becker makes him almost impossible to watch without becoming nauseous. I find most physicists can describe all there need be said about "what is real" from the perspective of quantum mechanics in a brief paper or a talk you can fit into a TED timeslot with moments to spare. But since non-professionals don't buy brief papers, they buy books instead, authors have to pad and pad and pad. Ugh. Nonetheless, Becker has a genuine quality that one can't help but find appealing. But when he showed his admiration for the multiverse, I made a decision about whether to read his book.

  • @anton-scottgoustin5425
    @anton-scottgoustin54254 жыл бұрын

    Very lucid language. I am a molecular and cell biologist, so this stuff is rather foreign to me. Probably if I talked about my work and my understanding, Adam Becker would feel the same about my talk.

  • @jeffreyharrison3731

    @jeffreyharrison3731

    Жыл бұрын

    I am a molecular biologist/biophysicist and my graduate advisor once said: It's not that mathematics is irrelevant to biology, it's just that most biologists are irrelevant to math.

  • @Gringohuevon
    @Gringohuevon5 жыл бұрын

    He might have a PhD but he understands fuck all. A theory describes a huge amount of phenomena and has advanced technology, but it doesn't feel right??? I know what I am sticking with. Ps Feymann was wrong..science has always been revolutionary, not evolutionary..

  • @jeffreyharrison3731

    @jeffreyharrison3731

    Жыл бұрын

    It's evolutionary, revolutionary, and, at times, reactionary.

  • @jasonsebring3983
    @jasonsebring39836 жыл бұрын

    tldw; he is saying many-worlds

  • @GOffUnit

    @GOffUnit

    5 жыл бұрын

    Wrong. He at one point says that the many-worlds interpretation is plausible, but in no way endorses it over all others. The only hard claim he seems to be making about any quantum physics interpretation is that the Copenhagen interpretation is incoherent at its core.

  • @acetate909

    @acetate909

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@GOffUnit The book details the absurd way in which the Copenhagen interpretation isn't even one interpretation and using that term is essentially meaningless. Bohr was famously incomprehensible in his papers and his own views on the measurement problem are not well defined. I really enjoyed this book and this talk.

  • @jeffreyharrison3731

    @jeffreyharrison3731

    Жыл бұрын

    I think MWI is probably going to be ascendant until String theory is retired. Objective collapse is pretty much discredited through experiments, leaving fewer options.

  • @philippedevlin8127
    @philippedevlin81276 жыл бұрын

    Mr. Adam Becker is a popularity seeker who takes is scientific divagations as established facts, one can have a PhD in physics and still misuse is knowledge. However - if the human mind can imagine something, ultimately given the time and the opportunity it will accomplish it. By assuming that the majority of people does not understand quantum mechanics, Mr. Becker endeavors to arrogantly illuminate the masses to is unreliable and yet up to scientific debate opinions on the subject. I believe that people should deeply research the many articles published on the subject and come up with their own conclusions. Personally I take offense at such display of fat theories and very lean assumptions of facts. Misinformation and controversial ideas are excellent means of challenging the scientific status quo, thought it should really be first discussed and argued within the scientific community.

  • @GOffUnit

    @GOffUnit

    5 жыл бұрын

    His book, though still scientific, is more history and philosophy than science. If someone wants to dive deeper into experimental physics then this is not the book for them but, in my opinion, this is still a great and valuable book. This book is a challenge to Feynman's notion that "if you think you understand quantum physics, you don't understand quantum physics," and it's made persuasively. Becker shows that despite what the popular historical narrative tells us, quantum mechanics was not all but settled before WWII, and that there is still much left to discover about it. Further, it's a source of encouragement for any aspiring physicists out there who share his unease about the present state of quantum physics and believe we can do better.