M
MindOverMatter2
Guest
There is to major problems with your position.Virtual particles come into existence for a brief time and then disappear - their “existence” comes from random fluctuations in the vacuum. The way I think about them (which may or may not be precisely correct - I have not studied QED) is that they have no real reality, but that the uncertainty in being able to say this permits particles to exist for a short amount of time. The more energetic they are the less time they can exist for, because their energy should be 0 and the more uncertainty we have in their energy (the more deviated their energy turns out to be from the norm) the more precisely we have to know their position (including their position in time). They’re a consequence of the uncertainty principle. There’s nothing “potential” about them, but we can’t exactly call them “real”. The distinction between “real” and “nothing” just stops working here. It’s a generally useful pre-quantum distinction, but it assumes everything is perfectly knowable in all its respects.
1. Whether something is knowable or not is irrelevant. The distinction between real and unreal is a logical absolute. When about that which is real or unreal, you are either, in a purely abstract manner, talking about something in its potentiality, its possibility of existence (in which case it isn’t yet real), or you are talking about some things actual reality. There is no “real” in-between. Possibilities are an expression of reality; not nothing. Something is either real or it isn’t. To say that nothing actually exists, is a contradiction in terms. In your interpretation nothing is no different from something; which is ridiculous. If that were true, logic itself would become objectively meaningless; which is impossible. A square triangle cannot exist. We know this for a fact. Something is either true or it isn’t; we know this for a fact it is the very foundation science itself. It cannot both be true that I exist and at the same not exist, since that which does not exist is not identical to that which is actual. This is self evident. Thus the vacuum is either a purely abstract notion, a verbal mathematical tool we use in order to give an intelligible foundation to the evidence of fluctuating electromagnetic energy from nowhere, or the vacuum is a real space containing fluctuating energy. I suspect that a mathematical ideology has taken the place of a genuine ontology, confusing some aspects of mathematical theory with reality.
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2.** There is also a conflict between the principle of empirical science and your interpretation. “Nothing”, as a** word**, describes the absence of some possible or impossible reality. Reality describes an actual being, which is either physical or non-physical. If it is physical then it can in principle be measured. If it is not real, then it is not “physical”, since there is no physicality in nothing, nothing doesn’t exist. Physical things exist. If the Quantum vacuum doesn’t exist, then it is impossible that it can be measured empirical, and thus it would not truly be a scientific entity. It can no more be measure than a square triangle. Thus your definition of a quantum vacuum has to be false at least in a literal sense. Thus far from being a real scientific interpretation Quantum theory; it is a faulty philosophy that has thrown ontological distinctions out of the window along with the very principle of rational thought itself; in effect, rendering reality as something that is fundamentally and completely irrational and self contradictory, since it can be both true that there is in fact a vacuum and there isn’t such a thing as a vacuum at the same time. God is both real and not real. Therefore the very concept of truth evaporates into meaninglessness
The problem is there is no scientific justification for this interpretation. It is purely philosophical. Science as an empirical art cannot prove or disprove logic, since it does not judge reality on that level. That something may appear apparently illogical is not empirical scientific evidence of an irrational universe. Hegelian dialectics.