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Math Science

Quantum Test Found For Mathematical Undecidability 223

KentuckyFC writes "Philosophers have long wondered at the profound link between mathematics and physics, but how deep does this connection go? Pretty deep according to the results of a quantum experiment exploring the nature of mathematical undecidability. Here's how: any logical system must be based on axioms, which are propositions that are defined to be true. A proposition is logically independent from these axioms if it can neither be proved nor disproved from them; mathematicians say it is undecidable. In the experiment, researchers encoded a set of axioms as quantum states. A particular measurement on this system can then be thought of as a proposition which, if undecidable, yields a random result — which is what they found. 'This sheds new light on the (mathematical) origin of quantum randomness in these measurements,' say the researchers (abstract)."
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Quantum Test Found For Mathematical Undecidability

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:26PM (#25962923)

    this may or may not be first post, but one thing is for certain: you suck.

    • People post things like this to archiv all the time. It doesn't mean it is correct or deep.
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Garridan ( 597129 )

        Peer-reviewed journals print things like this all the time. It doesn't mean it is correct or deep.

        There... fixed that for you. You aren't incorrect, but your statement indicates a bias against information based on its source. That's an ad hominem argument, and is logically unsound. If you spot a problem in the paper, point it out.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          It's actually not an ad hominem argument. The plea was to "not get too excited" and the reason given was the track record of the source. No claim about the accuracy of the paper was made, either way. Before anybody opens up some 12 year old scotch, that author of the paper must successfully defend it.

  • Can someone please explain in layman's terms how this results in a decision, for those of us who aren't quantum mathematicians? I somewhat get the whole "indecision results in a decision" thing but seems to be a hard idea to wrap my brain around so to speak.

    • Re:Umm (Score:4, Informative)

      by jeffasselin ( 566598 ) <cormacolinde@gma ... com minus author> on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:37PM (#25963105) Journal

      It's a bit hard to explain all this stuff in few words. I could refer you to about half a dozen Wikipedia and Wolfram articles on the subjects and you'd still be in the dark. Instead I'll suggest you read GÃdel, Escher, Bach by Douglas Hofstadter, who tackles many of those subjects in an amusing and educational way.

      • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

        by ByOhTek ( 1181381 )

        Good book. LONG read.

      • Re:Umm (Score:5, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:55PM (#25963455)

        They found a way to physically encode a mathematical "axiom" into quantum states. They set up a particular axiom as a quantum state machine, then measure the system. The measurement is done in such a way that it is equivalent to asking "is X true given this axiom?" where X is any mathematical "proposition". The answer to that question can be "yes", "no", or "not enough information". If the latter is the case, the results from the physical quantum experiment will show a random distribution.

        So, if I have a mathematical proposition and I'm not sure if it is supported by a certain axiom, I could actually build the axiom into a quantum state machine and measure it in a way that tests my particular proposition. If the results after multiple runs are distributed randomly, then it means that the axiom can not prove or disprove the proposition.

        • Re:Umm (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Eli Gottlieb ( 917758 ) <eligottlieb@noSpAm.gmail.com> on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:08PM (#25963677) Homepage Journal

          Does this also mean we could also prove theorems by physical experiment?

          • Re:Umm (Score:4, Insightful)

            by melikamp ( 631205 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:35PM (#25964175) Homepage Journal

            Not prove in the mathematical sense, but show that the statements are true with arbitrarily high probability. It is akin to determining the area of the circle using Monte Carlo method [wikipedia.org]. The law of large numbers guarantees that you will get the correct result if you invest infinite time.

          • Re:Umm (Score:5, Informative)

            by physicsphairy ( 720718 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:55PM (#25964515)

            No.

            This is a method to determine whether or statements are part of a system, not whether they are true or false within the system.

            So, it can tell you whether or not there is an answer, but not what the answer is.

            Furthermore, it can only truly prove that something is not a member of the system, because then you get different answers when you query the system. But if you keep getting the same answers, well, that could just be coincidence. Hence, you can be fairly certain, but it is not the same thing as a proof.

            • Hi there,

              I appreciate the time you have taken to try to explain this, but I feel that I am still somewhat missing the basic concepts behind your post.

              Would you be so kind as to repost this using a much more slashdot friend car analogy?

              - Thanks in advance,
              - Fluffeh.
    • Re:Umm (Score:4, Interesting)

      by physicsphairy ( 720718 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:47PM (#25963289)

      I suppose you could think of it as testing "computability." If your proposition is understandable by the quantum system you set up, it will spit out an answer. And you'll always get that answer.

      But if it is not understandable by the quantum system you set up, then no operation is performed, and whatever comes out is simply the result of quantum randomness.

    • Re:Umm (Score:4, Insightful)

      by nategoose ( 1004564 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:51PM (#25963365)
      Didn't Rush have a song about this?
    • Re:Umm (Score:5, Interesting)

      by CorporateSuit ( 1319461 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:01PM (#25963555)

      Can someone please explain in layman's terms how this results in a decision, for those of us who aren't quantum mathematicians? I somewhat get the whole "indecision results in a decision" thing but seems to be a hard idea to wrap my brain around so to speak.

      They're saying that no one orders lobster at McDonald's -- not because people don't like lobster, but because it's not on the menu. You can't base how the general population feels about lobster by asking McDonald's how many lobsters they sell compared to how many hamburgers.

      So instead of looking to see what people feel about lobster, they're asking restaurants how many lobsters they sell in order to determine if lobster is even on the menu. Once that's set in stone, THEN they can start testing the demographics of how many people prefer lobster to what.

      At least that's how I interpreted what they're doing... :\

      • Re:Umm (Score:4, Informative)

        by MicktheMech ( 697533 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:07PM (#25963669) Homepage
        They most certainly DO [youtube.com] sell lobster, but periodically. However, you're right, nobody buys it, because it's disgusting.
      • They're saying that no one orders lobster at McDonald's -- not because people don't like lobster, but because it's not on the menu.

        Apropos to nothing, but that's a false statement.

        It's not on the menu everywhere, but there exists a McLobster [google.com] in some places. McDonald's does some regional tailoring of menus. I'm sure they have some stuff world wide you wouldn't even recognize.

        Shoulda stuck with a car analogy. ;-)

        Cheers

    • Re:Umm (Score:4, Interesting)

      by LoyalOpposition ( 168041 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:21PM (#25963899)

      Can someone please explain in layman's terms how this results in a decision, for those of us who aren't quantum mathematicians? I somewhat get the whole "indecision results in a decision" thing but seems to be a hard idea to wrap my brain around so to speak.

      I immediately thought of Euclid's five postulates. For years people thought that the fifth, parallel, postulate could be derived from the other four. That held for about 2100 years until a couple of boffins found used two different negations of the fifth to derive entire geometries. Applying that to this, I would suppose that if it were possible to encode Euclid's first four postulates into quantum states, and ask whether there was exactly one line parallel to another through a point not on the second line, then the result would sometimes be yes and sometimes no.

      -Loyal

    • by mblase ( 200735 )

      I'd like to explain it, but i'm just not sure.

    • There are rules. They call them axioms.

      If something is neither following nor breaking the rules, that thing is "undecidable".

      If it's "undecidable", then you get a random result. That should be somewhat obvious: if you're not sure what something is doing, then you can't predict future actions.

      They turned these rules into quantum states and measured a "thing" against it.

      If the "thing" isn't following or breaking the rules, then they should get a random result. That's what they found.

    • Re:Umm (Score:4, Informative)

      by againjj ( 1132651 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @07:20PM (#25968051)

      Okay, I'll try.

      A formal system is an initial set of statements and a set of rules that can be applied to those statements to create additional statements. The initial statements are axioms. The additional statements are theorems. Standard logic is one such system, and arithmetic is another.

      A statement is decidable if it can be proven true or false; that is, either the statement can be proven true or the negation of the statement can be proven true. A formal system is complete if and only if all statements written in the language of the formal system are decidable. Arithmetic is not complete (see Godel), nor can enough axioms be added to make it complete. Some formal systems can be made complete by adding enough axioms.

      This paper states that, given a system that could be made complete, the axioms can be encoded in quantum states, and that repeated measurements corresponding to a statement will either give either an unvarying result or a random one. If the result is unvarying, then the statement is decidable, and if the result is random, then the statement is undecidable.

      While this is interesting, they mention in the paper that a classical (read: non-quantum) machine could be built to do the same thing. Further, you never actually prove anything, as n identical results could conceivably occur randomly. Finally, this work only applies to systems that can be made complete, so don't hold your breath waiting for the Riemann hypothesis to be solved using this method.

  • Model formal systems in quantum state encoding; undecidable theorem == uncertain state.

    Seems intuitively obvious to the casual observer.

  • Meh (Score:2, Funny)

    I'm not sure how I feel about this.
  • My take on it (Score:5, Informative)

    by melikamp ( 631205 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:45PM (#25963257) Homepage Journal

    In this paper, we will consider mathematical undecidability in certain axiomatic systems which can be completed and which therefore are not subject to Goodel's incompleteness theorem.

    [snip]

    Now we show that the undecidability of mathematical propositions can be tested in quantum experiments. To this end we introduce a physical "black box" whose internal configuration encodes Boolean functions.

    From what I understood, they use qubits to encode facts about finite boolean functions. For example, they can use a number of qubits to encode a situation where f:{0,1}->{0,1} and f(0) = 0. Sure enough, the proposition f(1) = 0 is undecidable from the given information, and they claim that they can measure this fact, which, imho, is really cool.

    However, those people who wanted to use qubits to establish consistency results should not hold their breath. For a finite structure, decidability of any statement can be checked by going through a long table. To do anything ineteresting, one would have to use infinitely many qubits, which I do not see happening.

    • Re:My take on it (Score:4, Interesting)

      by jeffasselin ( 566598 ) <cormacolinde@gma ... com minus author> on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:52PM (#25963389) Journal

      The feeling I get from reading this is that it might be possible to offer an interpretation of the Universe as a huge decidability-machine. It's a leap, of course, but might be interesting to explore.

      • Re:My take on it (Score:5, Interesting)

        by melikamp ( 631205 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:04PM (#25963605) Homepage Journal

        Interesting. I think you are onto something here. We can think of a universe as an encoding of a particular axiomatic system, and then there are "facts" in that universe which come up to surface with high probability. To an observer they look like "laws". Moreover, there may be some undecidable propositions which, to an observer, appear like sheer randomness. Also, if the number of qubits in the universe is infinite, it is quite possible that the universe "knows" everything.

        • I don't know if I understood you correct, but I've always thought that the universe could merely be a series of tiny binary particles that could follow one or two simple rules. A positive and negative particle that seek to attract to each other like magnetism but cannot coexist in the same location. If two particles following this rule were to interact with each other the singular rule would appear to complicate itself during this interaction but each particle is still going about it's task oblivious to t

        • by witte ( 681163 )

          >it is quite possible that the universe "knows" everything
          Except for the answer to that same question?

  • Sheesh (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Reality Master 101 ( 179095 ) <RealityMaster101@gmail. c o m> on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:45PM (#25963259) Homepage Journal

    Philosophers have long wondered at the profound link between mathematics and physics, but how deep does this connection go?

    What an utterly meaningless bit of drivel. Any philosopher wondering this ought to turn in his license.

    "Physics" is (to simplify) the scientific study of what rules the universe operates under. It's entirely possible and reasonable we can determine universal laws without having the faintest idea of *why* they are that way. It's observed truth that might even be totally different in a different part of the universe (we assume it's not, but that's just an assumption).

    Mathematics is an abstract game of counting, built up into great complexity. 1 + 1 = 2 will be true in any universe, under any god(s), in any circumstances. And all of mathematics is built up from that. It's universal truth.

    We use mathematics to quantify physics, but there is no "connection" between the two, except in the sense that we can count *anything* and say there's a connection. It's like saying, "How deep does the connection go between mathematics and bananas when I observe there are 10 bananas, and I add two more, and then I observe 12 bananas."

    • by 2names ( 531755 )
      1 + 1 = 2 will be true in any universe, under any god(s), in any circumstances.

      Only for sufficiently small values of 1.
    • Re:Sheesh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:57PM (#25963481) Homepage

      We use mathematics to quantify physics, but there is no "connection" between the two, except in the sense that we can count *anything* and say there's a connection.

      No, really, they're serious.

      The rules of math (which weren't so much invented as identified) seem oddly linked to the underlying physics. TFA mentions the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics [wikipedia.org] -- it's not so much that we can count the physics with the math, it's that the math predicts things which should be true, and are subsequently proven to be. The existence of things like a negative square root in an equation have predicted the existence of things like anti-particles, and those particles have been found experimentally.

      It's precisely the fact that the math isn't independent of the physics that is at issue here That's a very startling proposition because it goes well beyond simply counting what is, it means the same rules which define the math in the first place underly the physical mechanisms.

      Cheers

      • That's a very startling proposition because it goes well beyond simply counting what is, it means the same rules which define the math in the first place underly the physical mechanisms.

        But it really isn't startling at all. It's the only way it can be. Physics cannot violate mathematics -- because that's like saying physics might contradict 1 + 1 = 2. Or that physics might somehow cause having 10 bananas, adding 2 bananas, and winding up with 13 bananas.

        Mathematics underlies physics because it can't be an

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by gstoddart ( 321705 )

          But it really isn't startling at all. It's the only way it can be. Physics cannot violate mathematics

          You can't say this and also have previously said "We use mathematics to quantify physics, but there is no "connection" between the two.

          Well, you can, but only one can be true.

          It's true that the our understanding of physics is tied to the math, but for the math to accurately imply the existence of new phenomena which haven't previously been conceived of speaks more to the fact that the "real" physics obeys t

        • by hawkfish ( 8978 )

          But it really isn't startling at all. It's the only way it can be. Physics cannot violate mathematics -- because that's like saying physics might contradict 1 + 1 = 2. Or that physics might somehow cause having 10 bananas, adding 2 bananas, and winding up with 13 bananas.

          This is actually an assumption: You are assuming that your logical system (forgot the technical term, sorry, don't have Enderton in front of me) of arithmetic is the same as your model (remembered that one at least ;-) ). Which may or may not be true.

        • Its a lot more involved than 1 + 1 = 2 as well as 1 particle + 1 particle = 2 particles as opposed to three.

          Take the natural log "e" (2.718281828...) Why is it so many natural phenomena follow the natural log curve e^x as opposed to 2^x or some rational number? Is it merely a coincidence that physical systems follow what is basically a mathematical expression for a term that is its own differential?

          And what does e^2Ïi = 1 the physical ratio of the circumference of a circle have to do with the natural l

        • by HiThere ( 15173 )

          Actually, saying 1 + 1 = 2 is making a very strong statement about either the kinds of entities you are measuring or the kinds of operation that you consider equivalent to plus. E.g.:

          1 cloud + 1 cloud = 1 cloud...or possibly several clouds

          1 glass of fluid + 1 glass of fluid = 2 glasses of fluid. (Try adding a cup of water and a cup of absolute ethyl alcohol and measuring the result. Considerably less than 2 cups.)

          Etc.

          But even noting this kind of restriction, mathematics is unreasonably effective.

      • by 2names ( 531755 )
        Thank you for a wonderful supper.
      • by Brain-Fu ( 1274756 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:18PM (#25963833) Homepage Journal

        It's precisely the fact that the math isn't independent of the physics that is at issue here That's a very startling proposition

        The word "math" refers to a huge collection of symbolic rule sets. These rule sets were not all invented at once by some magical mathematician in the past. They were produced over thousands of years of refinement.

        One important point to note here is that many of these refinements were made specifically for the purpose of giving math a higher level of practical value. For example, the number zero, and subsequently the negative numbers, were added by most cultures only after they realized that they could derive a useful model of some aspect of reality by using these numbers.

        I don't see why it would be surprising at all that a language which has been refined, over time, to describe reality would wind up describing reality.

        I will further suggest that the truths of mathematics that seem intuitively obvious to us seem so only because our brains are structured such that these truths will seem intuitively obvious. What gave our brains this structure? Refinement-after-refinement due to the process of natural selection. So the reality which is being modeled by mathematics happens to be the same reality in which the inventors of mathematics (ie our brains) evolved. Who would have ever guessed that there would be some correspondence here?

        I think the surprise only comes about when we forget the true origins of mathematics, and the true origins of the brains that understand mathematics and use it to represent reality.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by key.aaron ( 1422339 )
          Mathematics is not, in general, refined to describe reality. Mathematics is refined by taking every logical rule to its farthest reaching implication. This goes far, far beyond anything that we currently see as based in our reality (though, as the current argument is about, it has the uncanny tendency to end up describing our physical reality extremely often). Physics however IS refined to describe our reality. It is precisely physics that ties the mathematical underpinnings to the reality that we obser
          • Mathematics is not, in general, refined to describe reality

            Oh Really? [wikipedia.org]

            Some highlights from the article:

            " prehistoric artifacts discovered in Africa and France, dated between 35,000 and 20,000 years old,[3] suggest early attempts to quantify time."

            "There is evidence that women devised counting to keep track of their menstrual cycles; 28 to 30 scratches on bone or stone, followed by a distinctive marker."

            "The earliest known mathematics in ancient India dates from 3000-2600 BC in the Indus Valley Civilization (

            • It's obvious that people use math that works to solve their problems -- counting for crops, zero for accounting, combinatorial digits for representing arbitrarily large numbers.

              I think the point that other people are trying to make is that there are lots of examples of the other direction: discoveries made in math, that later on are found to represent the world. People were wrestling with the idea of imaginary numbers -- square roots of negative numbers -- in Greek times. The math they provided turned out

        • Hrm. Not really. We use maths to describe all sorts of things that are not intuitive. How intuitive is a Riemann Sphere or any of the higher dimensional geometries? Things may have started out that way but we've gone off to describe worlds that could never exist in our universe.

          Anyhow, all of this is beside the point. It's not the fact that mathematics describes reality very well that is interesting because as you say that is obvious. The point is that something that is true about the physical world i

        • I don't see why it would be surprising at all that a language which has been refined, over time, to describe reality would wind up describing reality.

          A huge amount of math had nothing to do with describing reality at the time of its invention, and much still doesn't today.

          What aspect of reality were mathematicians trying to describe when they came up with imaginary numbers? I'll short circuit the rhetorical question here. They weren't, and imaginary numbers were considered to be, literally, imaginary and

      • by 12357bd ( 686909 )

        The existence of things like a negative square root in an equation have predicted the existence of things like anti-particles, and those particles have been found experimentally.

        That's only word playing.

        There's no more 'existence' in a negative square root, than to a positive one. You have to define what 'existence' means, and only then we can decide if there's some relation between anti-particles and negative square roots.

        It's a false dicothomy to talk about math and 'physics' as separate things.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by gstoddart ( 321705 )

          There's no more 'existence' in a negative square root, than to a positive one. You have to define what 'existence' means, and only then we can decide if there's some relation between anti-particles and negative square roots.

          There was an equation, which had a term with a square root. As a result of the way math works, if you have a positive square root, you also have a negative one (that's the level of existence I was referring to). That negative square root in the equation told us there should be anti-par

      • That relationship has always kicked me. The realization that we can discover things about the physical universe by doing mathematics is earth shattering. I sometimes wish that I had the necessary mathematics to even comprehend what the summaries are talking about because I get the feeling that we are at the crux of something huge.

      • by khallow ( 566160 )
        I don't see the issue being that we can describe physics to arbitrary detail with mathematic models, even to the point of predicting phenomena with those models. Physics is a special case of scientific empiricism. And mathematics is a language of empiricism. Instead, what is remarkable is the conciseness and parsimony of the mathematical description. It is reasonable to expect a priori that any empirical description of a system can be described with a sufficiently detailed mathematical model. It is not reas
    • I think they're just saying that it's interesting to explore which bits of mathematics end up being relevant to physics and which don't. For instance, I doubt anyone in the early 20th century expected number theory to crop up in a physical theory, but it did. Likewise, few people anticipated that quantum computing had interesting theoretical properties to it that differ from classical computing.

    • Re:Sheesh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gardyloo ( 512791 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:05PM (#25963633)

      We use mathematics to quantify physics, but there is no "connection" between the two, except in the sense that we can count *anything* and say there's a connection. It's like saying, "How deep does the connection go between mathematics and bananas when I observe there are 10 bananas, and I add two more, and then I observe 12 bananas."

      I'm glad you're so sure of yourself. However, the connection between *counting* (ring of integers) and, say, complex conjugation isn't so obvious. If you'd like to compete with Dirac (for example) and argue that he was dumb for taking so long to recognize antiparticles' existence, or that Green should have "obviously" recognized that there must be such things as evanescent waves because the Helmholtz equation has some complex roots for the wavenumbers, then be my guest.
            I don't know what your background is, but such connections between mathematics and the "real world" are NOT always obvious, and it is a continued source of delight and puzzlement when one explores some neglected branch-cut in the maths, and it turns out to have real impact on the physics. Please, explain to all of we poor physicists how bananas can point us to truth.

      • If you'd like to compete with Dirac (for example) and argue that he was dumb for taking so long to recognize antiparticles' existence, or that Green should have "obviously" recognized that there must be such things as evanescent waves because the Helmholtz equation has some complex roots for the wavenumbers, then be my guest.

        I'm not claiming that anything is obvious, or that the any particular equation automatically describes physical reality. I'm arguing more from the other side -- that it's silly to be

    • Mathematics is an abstract game of counting, built up into great complexity. 1 + 1 = 2 will be true in any universe, under any god(s), in any circumstances.

      Well...No, it's not. The famous story is told of the philosopher who was cloud watching. It seems that he saw one cloud, and he saw another cloud. As he watched one cloud approached the other until they got very close to each other and then merged. "What do you know?" declared the philosopher. "1+1=1."

      Now, the engineer will immediately object a

      • Units please, 1 small cloud + 1 small cloud does not = 1 small cloud. And 1 cat + 1 mouse != 2 fish either.

        Bad math does not disprove good math. Please try again.

        T

    • Re:Sheesh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Coryoth ( 254751 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @03:16PM (#25963785) Homepage Journal

      Mathematics is an abstract game of counting, built up into great complexity.

      Mathematics is a game of abstraction, played out in a wide variety of directions, counting being just one of them. The assumption that mathematics is just counting is rather frustrating. Yes, you can reduce mathematics to arithmetic, but then you can also reduce it to set theory, or to topos theory/category theory, and so on. The ability to express things in a particular way does not that that is what the the things are, especially given the profusion of different mutually interpretable "reductions" available.

      1 + 1 = 2 will be true in any universe, under any god(s), in any circumstances. And all of mathematics is built up from that. It's universal truth.

      Actually you can dream up universes where 1+1=2 doesn't hold. It can fail to hold for a variety of reasons. The various hypothetical universes vary with those reasons from completely uninteresting and trivial, through to, well, in this case, still relatively uninteresting. Of course there are other "fundamental truths" that you can drop (the law of excluded middle, for example, or DeMorgan's laws, which are both conceivably more fundamental than 1+1=2) and end up with remarkably rich and interesting universes. The absolute universality of mathematical truth is on rather shaky ground; certainly the mathematics we use seems pretty solid for our universe, but that doesn't make it universal over all possible universes.

      We use mathematics to quantify physics, but there is no "connection" between the two

      There is a connection to the extent that ideas developed in the abstract for purely mathematical reasons have often had surprising, unseen, and unlooked for applications to physics. It is the surprising aspect of that that makes philosphers question the apparently unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics.

      • Actually you can dream up universes where 1+1=2 doesn't hold. It can fail to hold for a variety of reasons.

        You can? I've thought about that problem for a while, and I didn't come up with anything except a debatable, trivial case. (See below.) Remember, for "1+1=2" not to hold, there would have to be *nothing* isomorphic to addition. It wouldn't be enough, for example, that that universe's laws of physics cause two colliding particles to make a third. Because you can then still say that "if there are three particles, it can be fully subdivided into 2 and 1" which is then isomorphic to 1+2=3. Even the possibi

        • I'm no mathematician -- a couple of years at university, hardly enough to qualify me as a number theorist -- but a few possibilities occur to me.

          • A universe where natural numbers do not represent absolute values, but some more complicated entity that can't be added simply. I'm imagining a universe where there would be no such thing as cardinality as we understand it.
          • A universe where equation is more like an implication, i.e. not a reversible operation (in our universe, if A implies B, that does not mean tha
          • You didn't imagine any possibilities there; you just rephrased the problem. A solution would be to show how that universe's laws work, such that cardinality is meaningless, or how it lacks informational reversibility. Simply positing the universe lacks cardinality is begging the question.

            misperception of "1+1=2" purely as a description of the physical world, when it doesn't have to be perceived that way.

            How is that a misperception? What can "1+1=2 is not true in this universe" even mean other than "1+1=2" does not map to any aspect of this universe. The only reason we can even say that "1+1=2" in this universe is that

      • 1+1=2 is stable. 1+1= 2 are both unstable. Therefore, while universes can exist based on one of the latter two, 1+1=1 will turn into a singularity, and 1+1=3 will expand into infinity.

        Actually, we might be in a 1+1= >2 universe, where 1+1 is very close to 2, but just a little over it.

      • by Twinbee ( 767046 )
        Actually you can dream up universes where 1+1=2 doesn't hold. It can fail to hold for a variety of reasons.

        And down the relativistic shoot we go. Would those reasons be related to physics by any chance? Honestly, I can't see how such an abstract concept such as math could conceivably even hint how 1+1 would not equal 2. If it equals something else, then congratulations, you have created an operator which does not have the quality that simple addition does.

        Equally, special numbers such as Pi and e will
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by againjj ( 1132651 )

          Actually you can dream up universes where 1+1=2 doesn't hold. It can fail to hold for a variety of reasons.

          And down the relativistic shoot we go. Would those reasons be related to physics by any chance? Honestly, I can't see how such an abstract concept such as math could conceivably even hint how 1+1 would not equal 2. If it equals something else, then congratulations, you have created an operator which does not have the quality that simple addition does.

          You fail to have enough imagination. As a trivial example of when 1+1=2 doesn't hold, what if addition did not exist? This is not an interesting example, nor can I come up with one that is interesting, but that is what GP said too.

          Equally, special numbers such as Pi and e will always output the same pattern of digits in any multi/quasi/supro-uno universe (given a particular base to start with - it doesn't have to be 10 of course).

          Ah, something more interesting! Pi only has its familiar value in Euclidean space (which is the space we live in, not so coincidentally). Imagine hyperbolic space, and you have a value for pi that is larger than standard, exactly how much bigger depending on the curvature.

    • Your 1+1=2 is only true in certain groups. Context, context, context. You can describe the "banana group" as having certain properties. I think there is more to it than you are saying. If physical systems behave ideally like groups with certain properties, then we can use this and there is, indeed, a connection. As one of the other comments points out, "1 black hole + 1 black hole != 2 black holes." In that case, the group in question is idempotent. If you say that the "black hole group" is idempotent, that

      • 1 black hole plus 1 black hole does too = 2 black holes. Try it. Get a telescope. Find one black hole. Then find another. Then count them. See? Two black holes.

        Now, if you combine two black holes... except combine isn't addition, in a mathematical sense.

        T

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by poopdeville ( 841677 )

      1 + 1 = 2 will be true in any universe, under any god(s), in any circumstances.

      Not true. It is often 0.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Mathematics is an abstract game of counting, built up into great complexity.

      That's either immensely profound, or it's plain wrong. I'm leaning towards ... wrong. You can't build up the system of real numbers by counting. You have to introduce more axioms, such as closure under the subtraction and square root operations, or geometric axioms, or plain numbery notions like Dedekind cuts to go beyond counting numbers.

      No you can't understand the world by counting, even elaborate forms of counting. It'd

    • Mathematics is an abstract game of counting, built up into great complexity. 1 + 1 = 2 will be true in any universe, under any god(s), in any circumstances. And all of mathematics is built up from that. It's universal truth.

      First of all, I can easily comprise a system in which 1+1=0, or some such, provided I am willing to deny one of the Peano postulates. It's not quite as fundamental as you think.

      Second of all, saying mathematics is just counting is like saying literature is just arranging letters. Ju

      • But you are not going far enough, because, simply put, it cannot for that matter be demonstrated that the universe even exists.

        Well, this is provably not true. I provably exist (on a subjective basis), and whatever container I'm in is "The Universe", by definition. What we can't prove is whether everything else in the universe exists.

        Though, there are some interesting philosophical arguments along these lines, about what we can deduce about the universe purely from our thoughts (e.g., the fact that I have

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by g2devi ( 898503 )

      > It's entirely possible and reasonable we can determine universal laws without having the faintest idea of *why* they are that way.
      > 1 + 1 = 2 will be true in any universe

      Really? I find the opposite is true.

      You need to know "why the laws hold" in order to know if the laws are applicable at all.

      Take one liter of water and add one liter of alcohol and mix together. I guarantee you won't get two liters of the mixture. Ditto with one liter of matter and one liter of antimatter.

      You might say, that you hav

    • by Omestes ( 471991 )

      We use mathematics to quantify physics, but there is no "connection" between the two, except in the sense that we can count *anything* and say there's a connection. It's like saying, "How deep does the connection go between mathematics and bananas when I observe there are 10 bananas, and I add two more, and then I observe 12 bananas."

      Actually it is really common to think that there is a deep connection between math and physics, so deep that they are indeed the same thing. Several of my math and physics fri

  • by girlintraining ( 1395911 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @02:57PM (#25963505)

    Okay, disclaimer: I suck at math. ^_^ That said -- how does this actually prove anything? How do they know that the way they set the system up isn't the reason why its creating random results and another system could be created that has all those axioms in it and doesn't produce a random result? Put another way -- how do they know amongst all the possible configurations that there isn't one?

    I've always looked at math as more of a language than a discipline, so in my own way I guess what I'm saying is how do they know they're asking the question right?

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by reginaldo ( 1412879 )
      Actually, that is exactly what they are testing. They want to see what happens when they don't ask the right question.

      They took a question that is asked "incorrectly", meaning there is ambiguity in either the proposition or the axioms used. Then they used the concept of quantum states to model the correct answers to this system. Since there is ambiguity, they know there will be more than one answer. What they wanted to know is what the cloud of answers looked like, either random or ordered in a fash
  • In every poll before the election there were these undecideds running up to a few percentage points. OK we shrugged. Then they conducted a poll on people who have already voted. And even then there were these 7% undecideds. That is the time we realized there is something profound going on. There are not simple minded doddering idiots. They are the quantum state of the axons and charmed quarks who can not ever be in the "decided" column! Evar! Never laugh at an undecided! They are mathematically proven to be
  • ... I'd like to know how to determine by measuring something that a result is "random", in a mathematically correct way. "it keeps changing, it must be random" is probably as reliable as "it's been running for 2 hours now, so it won't terminate". %-P
  • I looked at this, an an apparently related PhD thesis ( http://eprintweb.org/S/article/quant-ph/0812.0238 [eprintweb.org]).. I'm not so sure about the 'deepness' of the connection here. It seems to me the basic rationale is along the lines of: - In math, there are propositions that are undecidable given a set of axioms (Gödel) - A guy named Chatain (Int J Theor Phys, v21, 941) suggested that undecidabilty is due to a kind of information-theoretical incompleteness. Or in analogy to basic math: You can't solve a problem
  • I tried to RTFA, but I can't understand even flash ads on that page.
    • This is "Quantum Entaglement meets Kurt Godel". If you can understand anything, including the flash ads, they would have to withdraw the paper :)

  • They changed the outcome by measuring it!!!
  • I locked my cat in a box with a copy of the research to work out the Maths a few weeks ago and told him he could come out when finished. I wonder how he's doing...
  • A physicist's take (Score:5, Informative)

    by PhysicsPhil ( 880677 ) on Tuesday December 02, 2008 @04:17PM (#25964897)
    I'll try and give a simplified version of the idea from my understanding of the article.

    First, let me say this is extremely subtle stuff. I won't claim to understand it with even passing familiarity. But the summary and the article (which is a summary of a research paper) give enough clues to provide an educated guess.

    Part of quantum mechanics involves the idea that some kinds of measurements are incompatible. For example, the famous Heisenberg principle says you can't make a measurement on a particle's position and velocity and get accurate measurements for each. If you make a measurement on position you'll get a result, and a physicist would then say that the particle is in a quantum state that has a well-defined position operator (actually he'd say that the particle is in an eigenstate of the position operator). You could make the measurement a second time, and you'd get the same position. Ditto for the third, fourth, etc time as well.

    If you now go and try and measure velocity (momentum actually), you will also get a result. A physicist would write that particle is now in a quantum state with a well-defined momentum operator. Here's the catch: if you then go back and try to measure the particle's position again, you'll get a random result. It isn't possible to get a quantum state that has both position and momentum operators being well-defined.

    Some kinds of operators are compatible, though. For those with some quantum mechanics knowledge, it would be possible to simultaneously measure the total magnetic spin of a particle (S^2) and the spin component along one axis (Sz). The mathies would talk about Hilbert spaces and diagonalizable matrices, but for our purposes we'll just say that the quantum state has several well defined operators.

    So...my (limited) understanding of the paper is that the authors propose encoding a set of mathematical axiom by setting a particle into a quantum eigenstate that admits multiple well-defined operators, with each separate operator corresponding to a particular mathematical axiom.

    If a particular mathematical proposition is compatible with the given set of axioms, it will then be associated with a well-defined quantum operator of the particle. Making a measurement would then give the same answer each time (like measuring position over and over). But, if the proposition were undecidable, then the quantum operator would not be well-defined, and the measurement would produce a different (random) result each time.

    Actually implementing such a system would be another question entirely but, like so much of quantum mechanics, it does pose interesting thought experiments.

    • by mbkennel ( 97636 )

      Here's my physicist's take on it as well:

      This idea, rather like the Copenhagen interpretation, makes use of the magic "classical projection operator" box, which functions outside the normal dynamical laws of quantum mechanics.

      Back in the Real World, we make measuring devices out of electrons, protons and neutrons and things which themselves are quantum mechanical objects which evolve according to QM's equations of motion.

      The collapse of wave functions happens to be a very good *approximation* (like Fermi's

  • undecidability in math has nothing to do with the principle of uncertainty in quantum mechanics. There is no 'randomness' involved in principle of undecidability in math. and the next point is that claiming that mathematics and the way physics see the real world is deeply related is sooo 19th century. Math made quite a progress since then, you know. In particular, mathematics no longer uses the real world as a litmus test, so to speak. The key criteria is sufficient richness and consistency (which does *not

  • What? How deep it goes?

    Physics is mathematical modeling of natural processes.

    Physics is math. Even the statistical part is taking data and analyzing it, which is math.

    Math isn't all Physics. It's kind of a Venn diagram with Physics inside of Math.

    Natural processes aren't physics, but once you quantify one or try to model it functionally, you're creating a Physics model to fit to the Natural process.

    Natural processes are, at some level, dirt-simple. Even if you have to define a 26-dimensional idea of "dir

  • Judging from all the comments below, I see that we have a story that really is news for nerds.
    This stuff really matters!

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