RE: Is the Past Real?
October 18, 2022 at 6:00 pm
(This post was last modified: October 18, 2022 at 6:01 pm by polymath257.)
(October 18, 2022 at 12:15 pm)Angrboda Wrote:(October 18, 2022 at 9:47 am)polymath257 Wrote: But that would be a rat *at that time*. Could anyone, even in principle, determine *now* what Chaucer ate for his last meal?
Suppose he ate his last meal in a dark, sealed, room with nobody else there. What would, in principle, allow us to determine what he ate?
The best I can come up with is that whatever radiation Chaucer emitted at that point could, in principle, be detected and, maybe, the event reconstructed. But I am far from sure that could be done even in principle.
Your comment on the preservation of information (essentially, the unitarity of solutions of the Schrodinger equation) is relevant, but it seems to me that even that requires the past to be described probabilistically and the *specific event* may not be knowable even in principle.
Maybe we could, in principle, determine Chaucer had fish with a 60% probability and gruel with a 40% probability and that is all that could be known.
If I were to travel to the time of Chaucer's meal, would I deterministically land in his actual past, or only probabilistically?
Maybe it depends on how you travel. Any ideas?
And what, precisely, does 'actual past' mean in this context?