Single Shot said:
Whatwhat said:
Single Shot said:
"-snip-
TLDR Randomness at the level of electrons does strongly indicate a presence of free will (some things are more probable to happen but you can decide literally anyway).
Source: I am physicist (well I am studying to be one).
Except the context it was initially used in that quote is Einstein's rebuttal to that very concept. he was postulating that all actions and reactions follow a set of causal links, including those we don't understand yet. It suggests that electron movement is ordered, but follow a system so complex we see it as disorder. This is basic level Chaos Theory where all systems follow set rules but appear random because a tiny change in the input creates vast disparities in outputs.
Well Einstein very famously hated the very concept of Quantum Mechanics and he spent the latter part of his life trying to disprove it (might I add that unsucessfully). You are right that there still is a possibility that there is a set of rules that eliminates the randomness but to see the rules you would have to looking at it all from the outside. For example if you are trying to determine the position of particle then how do you do it? You could possibly fire a photon at it and see if it is there. The shorter wavelength of the photon the more you know about the position of the particle but you bump it with a photon and give it momentum (you give it more momentum as it has a shorter wavelength). So to conclude this thread you can't possibly tell at the present moment if there is a free will or not. Statistically speaking there isn't but with every individual person there is could be a certain amount of free will.
Except we're not talking about the position as we can measure it, just it's real location and the reasons for it being there. Quantum theory is, at it's core, the science of explaining what cannot be directly observed due to scale. But just because we cannot observe the specific movement of a single electron around it's p-orbitals does not mean there isn't some set of natural rules to govern it. Any science that suggests using randomness as anything but a stop-gap until it technology advances to the point they can explain the behaviour is lazy. We have proven hundreds of times that what is considered random is usually just unexplained, look at the stripes on a zebra as a very simple example. At one time we called them random, then we learned that they acted as identification for each individual member of a community. Now we understand their shape and size depends on a complex system of genetic factors, combined with developmental factors such as nutrient availability, physical stresses, and mother-secreted hormones during the pregnancy.
Also, check your facts. Einstein never really tried to disprove Quantum Physics, he just thought of the subject in terms of local realism and as such that there could be no instantaneous long-distance interactions in his viewpoint. That was finally proven wrong by Bell's theorem in the 60's where quantum entanglement of photons was shown. But while it was proven that interactions could indeed be instantaneous over distances, no proof (that I am aware of) has ever proven randomness exists as anything other than a poorly understood/currently undetectable system.
"Quantum mechanics is very worthy of regard. But an inner voice tells me that this not yet the right track. The theory yields much, but it hardly brings us closer to the Old One's secrets. I, in any case, am convinced that He does not play dice."