While taking an aimless morning stroll through wikipedia, I came upon something truly bizarre: the free will theorem, proven by John Conway (of Game of Life fame) and Simon Kochen:
- Their paper: http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0604079
- Six 1-hour lectures on the theorem given by one of it's provers (scroll down).
- 3 page paper criticizing the theorem: What does the free will theorem actually prove? This seems to claim that it only applies to a deterministic universe.
- Another article discussing the theorem.
I haven't had time to go through any of that yet, so not really much to say on it either. The definition of "free will" given (according to the wiki article) is that an outcome is not determined by prior conditions. In a deterministic universe though, shouldn't everything be determined by prior conditions? I'm also not sure that this definition of "free will" would imply "free choice" so much as just randomness and non-determinism. Would this be an argument against people claiming that humans are special because of possessing something like free will, in fact showing that we're no more special than inanimate particles? Or that whatever sort of "free will" a person might possess is no different from the randomness associated with measurement on a quantum level?
I should probably read up on this more before asking these questions, but this whole thing was just too bizarre and interesting not to post immediately.
Other stuff:The theorem states that, given the axioms, if the two experimenters in question are free to make choices about what measurements to take, then the results of the measurements cannot be determined by anything previous to the experiments.
It states that given certain conditions, if an experimenter can freely decide what quantities to measure in a particular experiment, then elementary particles must be free to choose their spins in order to make the measurements consistent with physical law. In Conway's provocative wording: "if experimenters have free will, then so do elementary particles."
- Their paper: http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0604079
- Six 1-hour lectures on the theorem given by one of it's provers (scroll down).
- 3 page paper criticizing the theorem: What does the free will theorem actually prove? This seems to claim that it only applies to a deterministic universe.
- Another article discussing the theorem.
I haven't had time to go through any of that yet, so not really much to say on it either. The definition of "free will" given (according to the wiki article) is that an outcome is not determined by prior conditions. In a deterministic universe though, shouldn't everything be determined by prior conditions? I'm also not sure that this definition of "free will" would imply "free choice" so much as just randomness and non-determinism. Would this be an argument against people claiming that humans are special because of possessing something like free will, in fact showing that we're no more special than inanimate particles? Or that whatever sort of "free will" a person might possess is no different from the randomness associated with measurement on a quantum level?
I should probably read up on this more before asking these questions, but this whole thing was just too bizarre and interesting not to post immediately.