David Albert & Tim Maudlin: The Measurement Problem, Solved?

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Robinson's Podcast #210 - David Albert & Tim Maudlin: Niels Bohr, Measurement, & Quantum Mechanics

David Albert is the Frederick E. Woodbridge Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University, director of the Philosophical Foundations of Physics program at Columbia, and a faculty member of the John Bell Institute for the Foundations of Physics. Tim Maudlin is Professor of Philosophy at NYU and Founder and Director of the JBI. This is David’s seventh appearance on Robinson’s Podcast. He last appeared on episode 189 with Barry Loewer to talk about the Mentaculus, their joint project on the foundations of statistical mechanics. This is Tim’s sixth appearance on the show. He last appeared on episode 188 with Sheldon Goldstein to discuss Bohmian mechanics. Tim and David last joined Robinson together for episode 67, which gave an overview of the foundations of quantum mechanics. In this episode, Robinson, David, and Tim talk about the measurement problem, the role of philosophy in physics, various thought experiments, like Schrödinger’s cat and Wigner’s friend, and Niels Bohr’s effects both on quantum mechanics and the philosophy of science. If you’re interested in the foundations of physics, then please check out the JBI, which is devoted to providing a home for research and education in this important area. Any donations are immensely helpful at this early stage in the institute’s life.

Robinson Erhardt researches symbolic logic and the foundations of mathematics at Stanford University. Join him in conversations with philosophers, scientists, and everyone in-between.

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My candidate for a modification is tachyonic Brownian motion which I need to add to any computer simulation of the behaviour of an alpha particle hitting two molecules of nitrogen tri-iodide. TBM or something like it is required to distinguish the behaviour of NI3 from NF3 and to destroy unitarity. The difficulty is that the computer simulation will need to run in many dimensions of configuration space and we are short of computer power. Does anyone know how to cheat?

david_porthouse