Indeterminism, causality and information: Has physics ever been
deterministic?
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2003.07411v3
- Date: Wed, 8 Mar 2023 10:37:50 GMT
- Title: Indeterminism, causality and information: Has physics ever been
deterministic?
- Authors: Flavio Del Santo
- Abstract summary: We show that there exist alternative stories to be told in which classical mechanics can be interpreted as a fundamentally indeterministic theory.
On the one hand, this leaves room for the many possibilities of an open future, yet, it brings into classical physics some of the conceptual issues typical of quantum mechanics.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: A tradition handed down among physicists maintains that classical physics is
a perfectly deterministic theory capable of predicting the future with absolute
certainty, independently of any interpretations. It also tells that it was
quantum mechanics that introduced fundamental indeterminacy into physics. We
show that there exist alternative stories to be told in which classical
mechanics, too, can be interpreted as a fundamentally indeterministic theory.
On the one hand, this leaves room for the many possibilities of an open future,
yet, on the other, it brings into classical physics some of the conceptual
issues typical of quantum mechanics, such as the measurement problem. We
discuss here some of the issues of an alternative, indeterministic classical
physics and their relation to the theory of information and the notion of
causality.
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