I'm gonna be a bit obnoxious here and ask people to please consider before sharing Schrödinger memes, and for two reasons:
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I'm going to quote my own reply as a kind of addendum here, as there's a more general point I want to extract. Taxonomy is fucking hard, and when we're talking about living beings like humans and cats, even defining "alive" and "dead" is incredibly difficult to do in practice.
The propaganda work of Schrödinger's Cat, then, is to invite us to falsely extrapolate that complexity onto quantum mechanics.
Cassandra is only carbon now (@xgranade@wandering.shop)
@dragonarchitect@rubber.social "Alive" and "dead" are *incredibly* complex phenomena, and even modern medicine hasn't been able to conclusively define those words. There are cases of medically "dead" patients coming back to life, not because of anything supernatural, but just because our definitions suck. So inviting someone to think of another even more complex state than that is a nonstarter. But that apparent absurdity goes away when you ask a simpler question like "is this electron here or there."
The Wandering Shop (wandering.shop)
Modern medicine has not been able to come up with a precise enough taxonomy for "alive" and "dead" to enable statements like "once something is dead, it will never be alive again." That complexity has absolutely *nothing* to do with quantum mechanics, and it's a thought-terminating cliche to conflate that complexity with quantum mechanics.
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You're not going to understand quantum mechanics without a little bit of work, sure, but that's not unique to quantum mechanics at all! That's kind of how learning works!
The learning required to understand quantum mechanics is not terribly out of line with other fields, but memes like Schrödinger's Cat prime us to believe that it's not understandable at *all*. Which I reject.
@xgranade I can't speak to the actual history, but I always took the Schrödinger's Cat thought experiment as more making a philosophical point that the Copenhagen Interpretation, while often a useful framing for designing experiments, cannot be literally true.
Which doesn't change the fact that it's often used as "look how ~weird~ and ~incomprehensible~ quantum mechanics is", especially in pop-science presentations, and that has all the problems you mentioned. Think I've seen exactly one pop-sci book that doesn't do that, which was a relief to see.
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Modern medicine has not been able to come up with a precise enough taxonomy for "alive" and "dead" to enable statements like "once something is dead, it will never be alive again." That complexity has absolutely *nothing* to do with quantum mechanics, and it's a thought-terminating cliche to conflate that complexity with quantum mechanics.
@xgranade one could argue that Fungi *are* death
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You're not going to understand quantum mechanics without a little bit of work, sure, but that's not unique to quantum mechanics at all! That's kind of how learning works!
The learning required to understand quantum mechanics is not terribly out of line with other fields, but memes like Schrödinger's Cat prime us to believe that it's not understandable at *all*. Which I reject.
@xgranade I was really disappointed that the quantum mechanics textbook assigned when I took the class described the field as “unintuitive” in its introduction. “Intuitive” is subjective, and if “unintuitive” is how you think of something then maybe you shouldn’t be writing a textbook about it
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@xgranade resisting the urge to make a sorry/not-sorry joke here
glad I didn't undercut the (extremely correct) point of the thread by stuffing my shitposting into CWs
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@xgranade one could argue that Fungi *are* death
@cthos "you cannot kill me in any way that matters" is a meme for very good reason.
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@cthos "you cannot kill me in any way that matters" is a meme for very good reason.
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@xgranade oh no. I liked it because of the cat.
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@alter_kaker @Leendaal I mean, sure, but as with most humor, unpacking and problematizing the power dynamics that make a joke work is a useful exercise in inclusive thinking. That's why I said "consider" and not "abstain."
If you can punch up with a Schrödinger joke, knowing the power dynamics at play, then by all means. I'd nominate "Schrödinger's asshole" jokes as one potential category where you can do that analysis and come out with a joke that avoids hero worshiping and disinformation.
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@dragonarchitect That's when you get to the actual resolution, which is "position is the wrong set of variables to use to describe this object. It is in a definite and certain state, but I should use a different set of variables to describe that state."
@xgranade @dragonarchitect This reminds me a little of a misuse of square root notation to negative numbers that leads to nonsense.
If x := sqrt(-1) then x.x = -1 but also x.x = sqrt(-1 . -1) = sqrt(1) = 1, a contradiction.
This assumes that sqrt is a function with a single value for every real input. By *convention* sqrt(x) is the positive solution to “what number’s square is x?” but you cannot extend that convention to negative x since “positive” for complex numbers doesn’t even make sense.
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I'm gonna be a bit obnoxious here and ask people to please consider before sharing Schrödinger memes, and for two reasons:
• Schrödinger was a serial pedophile, and should not be glorified.
• Schrödinger's Cat was originally posed as a thought experiment to try and make quantum mechanics more confusing, as a form of ridicule. Its use in the field today is a kind of institutionalized gatekeeping.@xgranade Can we do like a Geordi meme "Schrödinger's rapist" vs "Schrödinger was a rapist" to get the point across, or is that just in too bad taste?
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@xgranade Can we do like a Geordi meme "Schrödinger's rapist" vs "Schrödinger was a rapist" to get the point across, or is that just in too bad taste?
@dalias I'm definitely not the arbiter on that, but I would laugh, to be sure.
More seriously, though, I've seen "Schrödinger's rapist" jokes that work in context of the power dynamics by putting the Schrödinger in the joke in the role of the rapist. It's not an easy kind of joke to tell in a positive punch-up kind of way, but I do think it's possible?
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@alter_kaker @Leendaal I mean, sure, but as with most humor, unpacking and problematizing the power dynamics that make a joke work is a useful exercise in inclusive thinking. That's why I said "consider" and not "abstain."
If you can punch up with a Schrödinger joke, knowing the power dynamics at play, then by all means. I'd nominate "Schrödinger's asshole" jokes as one potential category where you can do that analysis and come out with a joke that avoids hero worshiping and disinformation.
@xgranade the joke I'm thinking about kind of ignores Schrödinger entirely and treats the story as a pop culture phenomenon rather than a thought experiment in physics. In case you're curious:
https://www.tumblr.com/discworldtour/152679700373/greebo-had-spent-an-irritating-two-minutes-in-thatI suppose that in a way this joke highlights the absurdity you're talking about.
By the way, I haven't touched quantum physics at all since high school, and the only thing I did was solve Heisenberg's equation for a few things including an elephant. So basically I'm 100% out of my depth in this conversation, which is why the only thing I'm doing is bringing up a joke from a satirical fantasy novel. I appreciate your thread, I wish I was able to understand more...
@Leendaal -
You're not going to understand quantum mechanics without a little bit of work, sure, but that's not unique to quantum mechanics at all! That's kind of how learning works!
The learning required to understand quantum mechanics is not terribly out of line with other fields, but memes like Schrödinger's Cat prime us to believe that it's not understandable at *all*. Which I reject.
@xgranade hm. I'm mostly in agreement with this thread and yet I've found the Schrödinger thought-experiment not a totally useless or obfuscatory one. It invites reflection on what it means, at the level of nitty-gritty molecular biology, to be "alive" or "dead". neither state is a simple one but rather a great range of arrangements of matter which may be considered "alive" or "dead". and there's also "dying" in between: one can imagine a configuration of an organism which may probably lead to death but not necessarily.
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@xgranade oh no. I liked it because of the cat.
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I'm gonna be a bit obnoxious here and ask people to please consider before sharing Schrödinger memes, and for two reasons:
• Schrödinger was a serial pedophile, and should not be glorified.
• Schrödinger's Cat was originally posed as a thought experiment to try and make quantum mechanics more confusing, as a form of ridicule. Its use in the field today is a kind of institutionalized gatekeeping.@xgranade@wandering.shop to be fair, some of the schrödinger memes do mock the concept, with the cat meowing and him responding "shut up" and all. still, he deserves much worse than just that sort of mocking
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@xgranade hm. I'm mostly in agreement with this thread and yet I've found the Schrödinger thought-experiment not a totally useless or obfuscatory one. It invites reflection on what it means, at the level of nitty-gritty molecular biology, to be "alive" or "dead". neither state is a simple one but rather a great range of arrangements of matter which may be considered "alive" or "dead". and there's also "dying" in between: one can imagine a configuration of an organism which may probably lead to death but not necessarily.
@mxchara The original intent and modern usage of Schrödinger's Cat are both obfuscatory, but that doesn't prevent one from taking something useful away in spite of the intentions behind the thought experiment.
In the case you highlight, I think that's pretty far outside the reflections that those wielding Schrödinger's Cat intend to cause, but it's awesome that you draw that anyway?
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@xgranade@wandering.shop to be fair, some of the schrödinger memes do mock the concept, with the cat meowing and him responding "shut up" and all. still, he deserves much worse than just that sort of mocking
@creedow I mean, yeah, there's a reason I opened my thread with "consider" and not "just don't." I agree, it's possible to construct positive punch-up jokes and memes around Schrödinger's Cat, but doing so takes a lot of historical context and analyzing power dynamics. Possible, and I've seen examples that I'd argue fit the bill, but it's difficult and not something done casually.
