Physicist and dabbler in writing fantasy/science fiction.
You are completely correct in the "how does the machine work inside?" question. As you point out that density matrix has the exact form of something that is entangled with something else.
I think its very important to be discussing what is real, although as we always have a nonzero inferential distance between ourselves and the real the discussion has to be a little bit caveated and pragmatic.
I think the reason is that in quantum physics we also have operators representing processes (like the Hamiltonian operator making the system evolve with time, or the position operator that "measures" position, or the creation operator that adds a photon), and the density matrix has exactly the same mathematical form as these other operators (apart from the fact the density matrix needs to be normalized).
But that doesn't really solve the mystery fully, because they could all just be called "matrices" or "tensors" instead of "operators". (Maybe it gets us halfway to an explanation, because all of the ones other than the density operator look like they "operate" on the system to make it change its state.)
Speculatively, it might be to do with the fact that some of these operators are applied on continuous variables (like position), where the matrix representation has infinite rows and infinite columns - maybe their is some technicality where if you have an object like that you have to stop using the word "matrix" or the maths police lock you up.
There are some non-obvious issues with saying "the wavefunction really exists, but the density matrix is only a representation of our own ignorance". Its a perfectly defensible viewpoint, but I think it is interesting to look at some of its potential problems:
All of that said, your position is fully reasonable, I am just trying to point out that the way density matrices are usually introduced in teaching or textbooks does make the issue seem a lot more clear cut than I think it really is.
I just looked up the breakfast hypothetical. Its interesting, thanks for sharing it.
So, my understanding is someone asked a lot of prisoners "How would you feel if you hadn't had breakfast this morning?", did IQ tests on the same prisoners and found that the ones who answered "I did have breakfast this morning." or equivalent were on average very low in IQ.
It is interesting. I think in conversation people very often hear the question they were expecting, and if its unexpected enough they hear the words rearranged to make it more expected. There are conversations where the question could fit smoothly, but in most contexts its a weird question that would mostly be measuring "are people hearing what they expect, or what is being actually said". This may also correlate strongly with having English as a second language.
I find the idea "dumb people just can't understand a counterfactual" completely implausible. Without a counterfactual you can't establish causality. Without causality their is no way of connecting action to outcome. How could such a person even learn to use a TV remote? Given that these people (I assume) can operate TV remotes they must in fact understand counterfactuals internally, although its possible they lack the language skills to clearly communicate about them.
The question of "why should the observed frequencies of events be proportional to the square amplitudes" is actually one of the places where many people perceive something fishy or weird with many worlds. [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1355219809000306 ]
To clarify, its not a question of possibly rejecting the square-amplitude Born Rule while keeping many worlds. Its a question of whether the square-amplitude Born Rule makes sense within the many worlds perspective, and it if doesn't what should be modified about the many worlds perspective to make it make sense.
I agree with this. Its something about the guilt that makes this work. Also the sense that you went into it yourself somehow reshapes the perception.
I think the loan shark business model maybe follows the same logic. [If you are going to eventually get into a situation where the victim pays or else suffers violence, then why doesn't the perpetrator just skip the costly loan step at the beginning and go in threat first? I assume that the existence of loan sharks (rather than just blackmailers) proves something about how if people feel like they made a bad choice or engaged willingly at some point they are more susceptible. Or maybe its frog boiling.]
On the "what did we start getting right in the 1980's for reducing global poverty" I think most of the answer was a change in direction of China. In the late 70's they started reforming their economy (added more capitalism, less command economy): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_economic_reform.
Comparing this graph on wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poverty_in_China#/media/File:Poverty_in_China.svg , to yours, it looks like China accounts for practically all of the drop in poverty since the 1980s.
Arguably this is a good example for your other points. More willing participation, less central command.
I don't think the framing "Is behaviour X exploitation?" is the right framing. It takes what (should be) an argument about morality and instead turns it into an argument about the definition of the word "exploitation" (where we take it as given that, whatever the hell we decide exploitation "actually means" it is a bad thing). For example see this post: https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/yCWPkLi8wJvewPbEp/the-noncentral-fallacy-the-worst-argument-in-the-world. Once we have a definition of "exploitation" their might be some weird edge cases that are technically exploitation but are obviously fine.
The substantial argument (I think) is that when two parties have unequal bargaining positions, is it OK for the stronger party to get the best deal it can? A full-widget is worth a million dollars. I possess the only left half of a widget in the world. Ten million people each possess a right half that could doc with my left half. Those not used to make widgets are worthless. What is the ethical split for me to offer for a right half in this case?
[This is maybe kind of equivalent to the dating example you give. At least in my view the "bad thing" in the dating example is the phrase "She begins using this position to change the relationship". The word "change" is the one that sets the alarms for me. If they both went in knowing what was going on then, to me, that's Ok. Its the "trap" that is not. I think most of the things we would object to are like this, those Monday meetings and that expensive suit are implied to be surprises jumped onto poor Bob.]
The teapot comparison (to me) seems to be a bad. I got carried away and wrote a wall of text. Feel free to ignore it!
First, lets think about normal probabilities in everyday life. Sometimes there are more ways for one state to come about that another state, for example if I shuffle a deck of cards the number of orderings that look random is much larger than the number of ways (1) of the cards being exactly in order.
However, this manner of thinking only applies to certain kinds of thing - those that are in-principle distinguishable. If you have a deck of blank cards, there is only one possible order, BBBBBB.... To take another example, an electronic bank account might display a total balance of $100. How many different ways are their for that $100 to be "arranged" in that bank account? The same number as 100 coins labelled "1" through "100"? No, of course not. Its just an integer stored on a computer, and their is only one way of picking out the integer 100. The surprising examples of this come from quantum physics, where photons act more like the bank account, where their is only 1 way of a particular mode to contain 100 indistinguishable photons. We don't need to understand the standard model for this, even if we didn't have any quantum theory at all we could still observe these Boson statistics in experiments.
So now, we encounter anthropic arguments like Doomsday. These arguments are essentially positing a distribution, where we take the exact same physical universe and its entire physical history from beginning to end, (which includes every atom, every synapse firing and so on). We then look at all of the "counting minds" in that universe (people count, ants probably don't, aliens, who knows), and we create a whole slew of "subjective universes", , , , , etc, where each of of them is atomically identical to the original but "I" am born as a different one of those minds (I think these are sometimes called "centred worlds"). We assume that all of these subjective universes were, in the first place, equally likely, and we start finding it a really weird coincidence that in the one we find ourselves in we are a human (instead of an Ant), or that we are early in history. This is, as I understand it, The Argument. You can phrase it without explicitly mentioning the different s, by saying "if there are trillions of people in the future, the chances of me being born in the present are very low. So, the fact I was born now should update me away from believing there will be trillions of people in the future". - but the s are still doing all the work in the background.
The conclusion depends on treating all those different subscripted s as distinguishable, like we would for cards that had symbols printed on them. But, if all the cards in the deck are identical there is only one sequence possible. I believe that all of the , , , 's etc are identical in this manner. By assumption they are atomically identical at all times in history, they differ only by which one of the thinking apes gets assigned the arbitrary label "me" - which isn't physically represented in any particle. You think they look different, and if we accept that we can indeed make these arguments, but if you think they are merely different descriptions of the same exact thing then the Doomsday argument no longer makes sense, and possibly some other anthropic arguments also fall apart. I don't think they do look different, if every "I" in the universe suddenly swapped places - but leaving all memories and personality behind in the physical synapses etc, then, how would I even know it? I would be a cyborg fighting in WWXIV and would have no memories of ever being some puny human typing on a web forum in the 21s Cent. Instead of imaging that I was born as someone else I could imagine that I could wake up as someone else, and in any case I wouldn't know any different.
So, at least to me, it looks like the anthropic arguments are advancing the idea of this orbital teapot (the different scripted s, although it is, in fairness, a very conceptually plausible teapot). There are, to me, three possible responses:
1 - This set of different worlds doesn't logically exist. You could push this for this response by arguing "I couldn't have been anyone but me, by definition." [Reject the premise entirely - there is no teapot]
2 - This set of different worlds does logically make sense, and after accepting it I see that it is a suspicious coincidence I am so early in history and I should worry about that. [accept the argument - there is a ceramic teapot orbiting Mars]
3 - This set of different worlds does logically make sense, but they should be treated like indistinguishable particles, blank playing cards or bank balances. [accept the core premise, but question its details in a way that rejects the conclusion - there is a teapot, but its chocolate, not ceramic.].
So, my point (after all that, Sorry!) is that I don't see any reason why (2) is more convincing that (3).
[For me personally, I don't like (1) because I think it does badly in cases where I get replicated in the future (eg sleeping beauty problems, or mind uploads or whatever). I reject (2) because the end result of accepting it is that I can infer information through evidence that is not causally linked to the information I gain (eg. I discover that the historical human population was much bigger than previously reported, and as a result I conclude the apocalypse is further in the future than I previously supposed). This leads me to thinking (3) seems right-ish, although I readily admit to being unsure about all this.].
The way it works normally is that you have a state ρ, and its acted on by some operator, a, which you can write as aρ. But this doesn't give a number, it gives a new state like the old ρ but different. (For example if a was the anhilation operator the new state is like the old state but with one fewer photons). This is how (for example) an operator acts on the state of the system to change that state. (Its a density matrix to density matrix map).
In dimensions terms this is: (1,1) = (1, 1) * (1,1)
(Two square matrices of size N multiply to give another square matrix of size N).
However, to get the expected outcome of a measurement on a particular state you take :Tr(aρ) where Tr is the trace. The trace basically gets the "plug" at the left hand side of a matrix and twists it around to plug it into the right hand side. So overall what is happening is that the operators a and ρ, each have shapes (1,1) and what we do is:
Tr( (1,1) * (1,1)) = Tr( (1, 1) ) = number.
The "inward facing" dimensions of each matrix get plugged into one another because the matrices multiply, and the outward facing dimensions get redirected by the trace operation to also plug into one another. (The Trace is like matrix multiplication but on paper that has been rolled up into a cylinder, so each of the two matrices inside sees the other on both sides). The net effect is exactly the same as if they had originally been organized into the shapes you suggest of (2,0) and (0,2) respectively.
So if the two "ports" are called A and B your way of doing it gives:
(AB, 0) * (0, AB) = (0, 0) IE number
The traditional way:
Tr( (A, B) * (B, A) ) = Tr( (A, A) ) = (0, 0) , IE number.
I haven't looked at tensors much but I think that in tensor-land this Trace operation takes the role of a really boring metric tensor that is just (1,1,1,1...) down the diagonal.
So (assuming I understand right) your way of doing it is cleaner and more elegant for getting the expectation value of a measurement. But the traditional system works more elegantly for applying an operator too a state to evolve it into another state.