This part deals with the ever-popular topic of quantum physics which the mystics like to use to justify, popularise, prove, or just market their product. Most of them unjustified if they had known the full picture of what is quantum physics and how little they have to do with so many things the mystics try to link them to. However, there is some link as we will explore. Thus we cannot blame the mystics fully for seeing by intuition perhaps how their field and quantum have some links.
First, we will describe quantum physics as understood by the physics community (or roughly thereabouts) before going into the details.
- Motivation.
- Understanding quantum physics.
- Historical development of quantum theory,
- The mathematical axioms of quantum as taught to Physics majors in University to show why quantum is solid, but not satisfactory in the interpretations.
- The various experiments which show quantum phenomenon.
- Classical assumptions which seem to be in danger.
- A brief overview of what each major interpretation of quantum says.
- One by one, going through the experiments to see how each interpretation of quantum would say about it, that is how to interpret what really happened in the experiment, or how to think about the maths and experiments that we have.
- One by one, going through the major interpretations and what classical assumptions tradeoffs they make, as well as the philosophical implications of each interpretation for Buddhism. If you’re not a Buddhist, you can do your own thinking of it for your personal religion, having seen the example of what it means for Buddhism if this particular interpretation is true.
As I write this chapter, analysing in detail
on the interpretations of quantum and the mathematical structure, I realized
that I am going a bit deep even without using equations. So it's not going to
be easy for people who are not used to reading popular physics books about
quantum to follow. So to motivate the Buddhists to follow, here are some
questions you can keep at the back of your mind as you read the physics-heavy
parts.
You might have come across terms like quantum
Buddhism, Buddhist emptiness and quantum agree on no reality, etc. A lot of
these are very vague. What I would like to establish is to first look at what
does emptiness say.
Let's use the term not-self. From Dhammapada
verse 279: "All phenomena (dhammas) are without self." In Mahayana,
the concept of emptiness is associated with not self. What it means is empty of
independent existence. If there's anything anywhere which is independently
existing, one may consider that as the essence and thus a self. The purpose of
seeing emptiness is to abandon attachments. We tend to attach to things which
are deemed as permanent to us because we want to seek reliability. A lot of
physicists are attached to physics because some may consider the physical
theories as eternally true, thus reliable. However, Buddha did tell us to let
go even of the Dhamma (after crossing over samsara), what's more about things
which are not Dhamma.
What classical physics assume is that reality
doesn't depend on us observers. If we have a universe without humans or any
living beings in it, those matter, physics, star formation, planet formations
would still be there without any minds to observe them. It's commonly thought
of in quantum that this is not true. However, Jim Baggott in his book Quantum
reality does nicely list out what do we mean when we say real.
Realist Proposition #1: The Moon is still
there when nobody looks at it (or thinks about it). There is such a thing as
objective reality.
Realist Proposition #2: If you can spray them,
then they are real. Invisible entities such as photons and electrons really do
exist.
Realist Proposition #3: The base concepts
appearing in scientific theories represent the real properties and behaviours
of real physical things. In quantum mechanics, the ‘base concept’ is the
wavefunction.
Realist Proposition #4: Scientific theories
provide insight and understanding, enabling us to do some things that we might
otherwise not have considered or thought possible. This is the ‘active’
proposition. When deciding whether a theory or interpretation is realist or
anti-realist, we ask ourselves what it encourages us to do.
Many quantum interpretations reject Realist
proposition no. 3, not so much no. 1 which a lot of people misunderstood.
Let's look at what Buddhism might say towards
these realist propositions.
- Perhaps
the moon is there, but no one is there to observe it, so what's the point of positing it's there. We might also imagine a very far future where all beings in samsara are liberated and attained to the final death, the physical universe is empty of sentient beings. Does the physical universe still exist? Yes, it can. Emptiness in Buddhism doesn't mean that reality must depend upon observers or sentient beings. It's enough that there are equations describing the evolutions of the physical universe and these equations show that there's no independently existing entity. Equations itself denotes dependence. It's just important to note that objective reality of physical universe doesn't mean that they are reliable, as they
too are impermanent. It's just that there might not need a link to the
mind for physical universe to exist on its own. What Buddhism does say is
that we as sentient beings, to us, we need to link things to the mind (the
6 senses linking to 6 sense consciounsess) to acknowledge them as
existing, so we cannot escape this dependence on the mind to perceive and
process the eternal and internal world. So the existence of a physical
universe independent of mind is a metaphysics, one which cannot be
verified by anyone. An assumption, which is also not required.
- There's
no issue with Buddhism to accept that electrons and other subatomic
particles are real too. They too are impermanent, empty of inherent existence.
- Buddhists
would also say that base concepts in classical theories just live in the
heads of the physicists. Nature works as it is, the understanding of
nature is also dependently arising, empty of inherent nature. This is how
we can let go of even physics theories.
- This
is the main interesting part to investigate the many interpretations of
quantum and Buddhism. What does it mean for Buddhism if this or that
interpretation is true? Can Buddhism accomdate this or that interpretation? Does Buddhism lend more support to certain interpretations
or another?
To properly follow in no. 4, we need to go in a lot of detailed analysis of quantum, the experiments and interpretations, physics-heavy. So if you're disinclined to follow, just know that Buddhism doesn't require insights into quantum physics for the emptiness, not self doctrine to be useful, appliable and true. Yet, if you wish to understand deeper and not depend upon the new age and many shallow comparisons of Buddhism and quantum out there, it's good to take the plunge.
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