40 research outputs found
The Fine-Tuning Argument
Our laws of nature and our cosmos appear to be delicately fine-tuned for life
to emerge, in a way that seems hard to attribute to chance. In view of this,
some have taken the opportunity to revive the scholastic Argument from Design,
whereas others have felt the need to explain this apparent fine-tuning of the
clockwork of the Universe by proposing the existence of a `Multiverse'. We
analyze this issue from a sober perspective. Having reviewed the literature and
having added several observations of our own, we conclude that cosmic
fine-tuning supports neither Design nor a Multiverse, since both of these fail
at an explanatory level as well as in a more quantitative context of Bayesian
confirmation theory (although there might be other reasons to believe in these
ideas, to be found in religion and in inflation and/or string theory,
respectively). In fact, fine-tuning and Design even seem to be at odds with
each other, whereas the inference from fine-tuning to a Multiverse only works
if the latter is underwritten by an additional metaphysical hypothesis we
consider unwarranted. Instead, we suggest that fine-tuning requires no special
explanation at all, since it is not the Universe that is fine-tuned for life,
but life that has been fine-tuned to the Universe.Comment: 16 pages, written for a general audienc
A bounded transform approach to self-adjoint operators: Functional calculus and affiliated von Neumann algebras
Spectral theory and functional calculus for unbounded self-adjoint operators
on a Hilbert space are usually treated through von Neumann's Cayley transform.
Based on ideas of Woronowicz, we redevelop this theory from the point of view
of multiplier algebras and the so-called bounded transform (which establishes a
bijective correspondence between closed operators and pure contractions). This
also leads to a simple account of the affiliation relation between von Neumann
algebras and self-adjoint operators.Comment: 10 page
Quantum theory and functional analysis
Quantum theory and functional analysis were created and put into essentially their final form during similar periods ending around 1930. Each was also a key outcome of the major revolutions that both physics and mathematics as a whole underwent at the time. This paper studies their interaction in this light, emphasizing the leading roles played by Hilbert in preparing the ground and by von Neumann in bringing them together during the crucial year of 1927, when he gave the modern, abstract definition of a Hilbert space and applied this concept to quantum mechanics (consolidated in his famous monograph from 1932).
Subsequently, I give a very brief overview of three areas of
functional analysis that have had fruitful interactions with quantum theory since 1932, namely unbounded operators, operator algebras, and distributions. The paper closes with some musings about the role of functional analysis in actual physics
Singularities, black holes, and cosmic censorship: A tribute to Roger Penrose
In the light of his recent (and fully deserved) Nobel Prize, this pedagogical
paper draws attention to a fundamental tension that drove Penrose's work on
general relativity. His 1965 singularity theorem (for which he got the prize)
does not in fact imply the existence of black holes (even if its assumptions
are met). Similarly, his versatile definition of a singular space-time does not
match the generally accepted definition of a black hole (derived from his
concept of null infinity). To overcome this, Penrose launched his cosmic
censorship conjecture(s), whose evolution we discuss. In particular, we review
both his own (mature) formulation and its later, inequivalent reformulation in
the PDE literature. As a compromise, one might say that in "generic" or
"physically reasonable" space-times, weak cosmic censorship postulates the
appearance and stability of event horizons, whereas strong cosmic censorship
asks for the instability and ensuing disappearance of Cauchy horizons. As an
encore, an appendix by Erik Curiel reviews the early history of the definition
of a black hole.Comment: 28 pages. Section 3.2 expanded by a page and some references adde
Indeterminism and Undecidability
The aim of this paper is to argue that the (alleged) indeterminism of quantum
mechanics, claimed by adherents of the Copenhagen interpretation since Born
(1926), can be proved from Chaitin's follow-up to Goedel's (first)
incompleteness theorem. In comparison, Bell's (1964) theorem as well as the
so-called free will theorem-originally due to Heywood and Redhead (1983)-left
two loopholes for deterministic hidden variable theories, namely giving up
either locality (more precisely: local contextuality, as in Bohmian mechanics)
or free choice (i.e. uncorrelated measurement settings, as in 't Hooft's
cellular automaton interpretation of quantum mechanics). The main point is that
Bell and others did not exploit the full empirical content of quantum
mechanics, which consists of long series of outcomes of repeated measurements
(idealized as infinite binary sequences): their arguments only used the
long-run relative frequencies derived from such series, and hence merely asked
hidden variable theories to reproduce single-case Born probabilities defined by
certain entangled bipartite states. If we idealize binary outcome strings of a
fair quantum coin flip as infinite sequences, quantum mechanics predicts that
these typically (i.e.\ almost surely) have a property called 1-randomness in
logic, which is much stronger than uncomputability. This is the key to my
claim, which is admittedly based on a stronger (yet compelling) notion of
determinism than what is common in the literature on hidden variable theories.Comment: 24 pages, v2 was major revision (doubled in size), v3 adds crucial
clarifying footnote 24 and corrects a few typo
Foundations of General Relativity
This book, dedicated to Roger Penrose, is a second, mathematically oriented course in general relativity. It contains extensive references and occasional excursions in the history and philosophy of gravity, including a relatively lengthy historical introduction. The book is intended for all students of general relativity of any age and orientation who have a background including at least first courses in special and general relativity, differential geometry, and topology. The material is developed in such a way that through the last two chapters the reader may acquire a taste of the modern mathematical study of black holes initiated by Penrose, Hawking, and others, as further influenced by the initial-value or PDE approach to general relativity. Successful readers might be able to begin reading research papers on black holes, especially in mathematical physics and in the philosophy of physics. The chapters are: Historical introduction, General differential geometry, Metric differential geometry, Curvature, Geodesics and causal structure, The singularity theorems of Hawking and Penrose, The Einstein equations, The 3+1 split of space-time, Black holes I: Exact solutions, and Black holes II: General theory. These are followed by two appendices containing background on Lie groups, Lie algebras, & constant curvature, and on Formal PDE theory
Foundations of General Relativity
This book, dedicated to Roger Penrose, is a second, mathematically oriented course in general relativity. It contains extensive references and occasional excursions in the history and philosophy of gravity, including a relatively lengthy historical introduction. The book is intended for all students of general relativity of any age and orientation who have a background including at least first courses in special and general relativity, differential geometry, and topology. The material is developed in such a way that through the last two chapters the reader may acquire a taste of the modern mathematical study of black holes initiated by Penrose, Hawking, and others, as further influenced by the initial-value or PDE approach to general relativity. Successful readers might be able to begin reading research papers on black holes, especially in mathematical physics and in the philosophy of physics. The chapters are: Historical introduction, General differential geometry, Metric differential geometry, Curvature, Geodesics and causal structure, The singularity theorems of Hawking and Penrose, The Einstein equations, The 3+1 split of space-time, Black holes I: Exact solutions, and Black holes II: General theory. These are followed by two appendices containing background on Lie groups, Lie algebras, & constant curvature, and on Formal PDE theory
Foundations of General Relativity
This book, dedicated to Roger Penrose, is a second, mathematically oriented course in general relativity. It contains extensive references and occasional excursions in the history and philosophy of gravity, including a relatively lengthy historical introduction. The book is intended for all students of general relativity of any age and orientation who have a background including at least first courses in special and general relativity, differential geometry, and topology. The material is developed in such a way that through the last two chapters the reader may acquire a taste of the modern mathematical study of black holes initiated by Penrose, Hawking, and others, as further influenced by the initial-value or PDE approach to general relativity. Successful readers might be able to begin reading research papers on black holes, especially in mathematical physics and in the philosophy of physics. The chapters are: Historical introduction, General differential geometry, Metric differential geometry, Curvature, Geodesics and causal structure, The singularity theorems of Hawking and Penrose, The Einstein equations, The 3+1 split of space-time, Black holes I: Exact solutions, and Black holes II: General theory. These are followed by two appendices containing background on Lie groups, Lie algebras, & constant curvature, and on Formal PDE theory