jeudi 21 février 2008

Bohmian mechanics and the organized skepticism

A few days ago, I read the paper about Bohmian mechanics on the website of the Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy (SEP) [1]. The last time I came across the name of David Bohm [2] was during my stay in Princeton in 2005. I was subletting a house of Princeton University and people in the neighborhood had the habit of leaving on a shelf at the laundry any book they didn’t want to carry along when they were moving out. In one of these, there was a chapter about scientists in Princeton who had been the victims of McCarthy. David Bohm was one of them.

David Bohm had worked on the Manhattan project, he was assistant professor at Princeton University in 1949. After being suspected of being a communist, he was fired from Princeton and he could not find any position in any other American university. He worked in several countries -notably in Brazil- and he eventually settled in London, where he died in 1992.

The exile of David Bohm was actually twofold: not only was he persona non grata in his own country, he was also left out of the international clique of physicists who mattered. Not surprisingly is Bohmian mechanics unorthodox; it is the work of an outcast.

What I realized with the SEP article is that the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics (QM) is not all there is about QM. David Bohm proposed a causal (deterministic) interpretation of quantum mechanics, the predictions of which are identical with the orthodox QM [3]. Philosophically, however, the two theories are at odds. In Bohmian mechanics the particles have a well defined position and momentum, and the wave function acts as a potential (a so-called pilot wave) that guides the particles. Such an approach was claimed to be impossible, and proved to be so by a famous theorem due to John Steward Bell [4]. Interestingly enough, here is what Bell himself wrote in 1987 about Bohmian mechanics [1]:

But why then had Born not told me of this ‘pilot wave’? If only to point out what was wrong with it? Why did von Neumann not consider it? More extraordinarily, why did people go on producing ‘‘impossibility’’ proofs, after 1952, and as recently as 1978? ... Why is the pilot wave picture ignored in text books? Should it not be taught, not as the only way, but as an antidote to the prevailing complacency? To show us that vagueness, subjectivity, and indeterminism, are not forced on us by experimental facts, but by deliberate theoretical choice?

This is the story of David Bohm and of his unorthodox theory. Yet another sad example of organized skepticism turned de facto into dogmatic denial.


[1] http://www.science.uva.nl/~seop/entries/qm-bohm/
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Bohm
[3] D. Bohm, Phys. Rev. 85 (1952) 166-180.
[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell%27s_Theorem

5 commentaires:

Anonyme a dit…

... ce qui n'est pas sans rappeler la situation actuelle en ce qui concerne le réchauffement global. Essayez donc, sans une réunion publique, d'émettre quelques doutes sur la vérité officielle.

http://commonsblog.org/archives/000736.php
http://climatesci.org/
http://ams.allenpress.com/archive/1520-0477/71/3/pdf/i1520-0477-71-3-288.pdf

Anonyme a dit…

From: "Personal Call For Modesty, Integrity, and Balance"
by Hendrik Tennekes
January 31, 2007

"Seventeen years ago, I wrote a column for Weather magazine, expressing my concerns about the lack of honesty, integrity and humility of many climate scientists. “I worry about the arrogance of scientists who claim they can help solve the climate problem, provided their research receives massive increases in funding”, reads one line from my text. Unknown to me, my friend Richard Lindzen was working on his famous paper “Some Cooling Concerning Global Warming”, which appeared in the Bulletin of the AMS at the same time. This was early 1990. It is 2007 now, and I want to ring the alarm bell again. There is a difference, though: then I was worried, now I am angry."

Anonyme a dit…

Je vois dans La recherche (avril 2008) que nous avons les interprétations suivantes de la mécanique quantique:

(1) Copenhagen/Bohr/1920s
(2) Relationnelle/Rovelli/1990s
(3) Onde pilote/Bohm/1950s
(4) Ondes multiples/Everette/1957
(5) Histoires consistantes/Griffiths/1980s

Bohm n'est donc pas si seul que cela...

Anonyme a dit…

Il semble que le modérateur fasse preuve d'une modération excessive!

Cédric Gommes a dit…

Oui. Depuis février j'ai aussi lu l'histoire d'une conversation que Bohm a eue avec Einstein à propos de son onde pilote. Einstein détestait l'idée d'une action à distance (but meme de l'onde pilote), et il etait donc convaincu que l'onde pilote ne pouvait pas etre la fin de l'histoire.

L'interprétation d'Everett (univers paralleles) donne lieu au paradoxe de l'immortalité quantique: il y a forcément un des chats de Schrodinger qui survit à tous les mécanismes et qui est donc immortel.

Everett travaillait sous la direction de Wheeler (le meme directeur de these que Feynman), et Wheeler décide d'envoyer Everett parler de sa thèse à Bohr. "Bohr was unimpressed" ai-je lu.

Everett a fini par laisser tomber la physique. Il a fait fortune en tant que consultant; il avait développé une méthode basée sur les multiplicateurs de Lagrange pour résoudre je ne sais trop quel problème financier.

Le fils d'Everett est le leader d'un groupe rock qu'une de mes collègues est allée écouter jouer récemment.