794 research outputs found
The Generalised Liar Paradox: A Quantum Model and Interpretation
The formalism of abstracted quantum mechanics is applied in a model of the
generalized Liar Paradox. Here, the Liar Paradox, a consistently testable
configuration of logical truth properties, is considered a dynamic conceptual
entity in the cognitive sphere. Basically, the intrinsic contextuality of the
truth-value of the Liar Paradox is appropriately covered by the abstracted
quantum mechanical approach. The formal details of the model are explicited
here for the generalized case. We prove the possibility of constructing a
quantum model of the m-sentence generalizations of the Liar Paradox. This
includes (i) the truth-falsehood state of the m-Liar Paradox can be represented
by an embedded 2m-dimensional quantum vector in a (2m)^m dimensional complex
Hilbert space, with cognitive interactions corresponding to projections, (ii)
the construction of a continuous 'time' dynamics is possible: typical truth and
falsehood value oscillations are described by Schrodinger evolution, (iii)
Kirchoff and von Neumann axioms are satisfied by introduction of 'truth-value
by inference' projectors, (iv) time invariance of unmeasured state.Comment: 13 pages, to be published in Foundations of Scienc
The Violation of Bell Inequalities in the Macroworld
We show that Bell inequalities can be violated in the macroscopic world.
The macroworld violation is illustrated using an example involving
connected vessels
of water. We show that whether the
violation of inequalities occurs in the microworld or in the macroworld, it
is the
identification of nonidentical events that plays a crucial role.
Specifically, we
prove that if nonidentical events are consistently differentiated,
Bell-type Pitowsky inequalities are no longer
violated, even for Bohm's example of two entangled spin 1/2 quantum
particles. We show how Bell inequalities can be
violated in cognition, specifically in the
relationship between abstract concepts and specific instances of these
concepts. This supports the hypothesis that
genuine quantum structure exists in the mind. We introduce a model where
the amount of nonlocality and the degree of
quantum uncertainty are parameterized, and demonstrate that increasing
nonlocality increases the degree of violation, while
increasing quantum uncertainty decreases the degree of violation
On the difference between exclosures and enclosures in ecology and the environment
Rehabilitation of degraded land in arid and semiarid environments often involves excluding livestock from degraded sites, creating what are usually but unfortunately not consistently, called _exclosures_. Their main objective is to allow native vegetation to regenerate as a means of providing fodder and woody biomass, to reduce soil erosion and to increase rain water infiltration. We are concerned that some of the alternative names for this practice that are reported in the international literature, including _closed area_, _area closure_ and _enclosure_, may lead to confusion and misunderstanding, especially when these are used as synonyms. Here we aim to illustrate the difference between exclosures and enclosures using recent ecological and environmental literature and provide guidance for their proper use
Quantum Structure in Competing Lizard Communities
Almost two decades of research on applications of the mathematical formalism
of quantum theory as a modeling tool in domains different from the micro-world
has given rise to many successful applications in situations related to human
behavior and thought, more specifically in cognitive processes of
decision-making and the ways concepts are combined into sentences. In this
article, we extend this approach to animal behavior, showing that an analysis
of an interactive situation involving a mating competition between certain
lizard morphs allows to identify a quantum theoretic structure. More in
particular, we show that when this lizard competition is analyzed structurally
in the light of a compound entity consisting of subentities, the contextuality
provided by the presence of an underlying rock-paper-scissors cyclic dynamics
leads to a violation of Bell's inequality, which means it is of a non-classical
type. We work out an explicit quantum-mechanical representation in Hilbert
space for the lizard situation and show that it faithfully models a set of
experimental data collected on three throat-colored morphs of a specific lizard
species. Furthermore, we investigate the Hilbert space modeling, and show that
the states describing the lizard competitions contain entanglement for each one
of the considered confrontations of lizards with different competing
strategies, which renders it no longer possible to interpret these states of
the competing lizards as compositions of states of the individual lizards.Comment: 28 page
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