nice.. please read it if you have enuf patience..
“What is Reality?” by Roger Penrose
New Scientist magazine, Nov. 18-24, 2006
WHAT
do we understand by "reality"? For those of us who consider ourselves
hard-headed realists, there is a kind of common-sense answer: "Reality
consists of those things - tables, chairs, trees, houses, planets,
animals, people and so on - which are actual things made of matter." We
might tend to include some more abstract-seeming notions such as space
and time, and the totality of all such "real" things would be referred
to as "the universe".
Some might well consider that this is not
the whole of reality, however. In particular, there is the question of
the reality of our minds. Should we not include a conscious experience
as something real? And what about concepts, such as truth, virtue or
beauty? Of course, some hard-headed people might adopt a doggedly
materialist point of view and take mentality and all its attributes to
be secondary to what is materially real. Our mental states, after all
(so it would be argued), are simply emergent features of the
construction and behaviour of our physical brains.
We behave
in certain ways merely because our brains act according to physical
laws - the same laws as those that are strictly obeyed by all other
pieces of physical material. Conscious mental experience, accordingly,
has no further reality than that of the material underlying its
existence; though not yet properly understood, it is merely an
"epiphenomenon", having no additional influence on the way that our
bodies behave beyond what those physical laws demand.
Some
philosophers might take an almost opposite view, arguing that it is
conscious experience itself that is primary. From this perspective, the
"external reality" that appears to constitute the ambient environment
of this experience is to be understood as a secondary construct that is
abstracted from conscious sense-data. Some might even feel driven to
the view that one's own particular conscious experience is to be
regarded as primary, and that the experiences of others are themselves
merely things to be abstracted, ultimately, from one's own sense-data.
I
have to confess to having considerable difficulty with such a picture
of reality, which seems to me lopsided. At best, it would be difficult
to convince anyone else of a theory of reality that depended upon such
solipsism for its basis. Moreover, I find it extremely hard to see how
the extraordinary precision that we seem to observe in the workings of
the natural world should find its basis in the musings of any
individual.
Even if such a solipsistic basis is not adopted, so
that the totality of all conscious experience is to be taken as the
primary reality, I still have great difficulty. This would seem to
demand that "external reality" is merely something that emerges from
some kind of majority-wins voting amongst the individual conscious
experiences of all of us taken together. I cannot see that such an
emergent picture could have anything like the robustness and precision
that we seem to see outside ourselves, stretching away seemingly
endlessly in all directions in space and in time, and inwards to minute
levels that we do not directly perceive with our senses; all requiring
many different kinds of precision instruments to explore the universe
over a vast range of different scales.
True, there is a
mystery about consciousness itself, and it is profoundly puzzling how
it could come about from the seemingly purely calculational, unfeeling
and utterly impersonal laws of physics that appear to govern the
behaviour of all material things. Nevertheless, among the basic laws of
physics that we know - and we do not yet know all of them - some are
precise to an extraordinary degree, far beyond the precision of our
direct sense experiences, or of the combined calculational powers of
all conscious individuals within the ken of mankind.
One example of
an over-reachingly deep and precise physical theory is Einstein's
magnificent general theory of relativity, which improves even upon the
already amazingly accurate Newtonian theory of gravity. In the
behaviour of the solar system, Newton's theory is precise to something
like one part in 107: Einstein's theory does much more, giving not only
corrections to Newton's theory that become relevant when gravitational
fields get large, but also predicting completely new effects, such as
black holes, gravitational lensing and gravitational waves - the
analogues, for gravitation, of the light waves of Maxwell's
electromagnetic theory.
The agreement between theory and experiment
here has been extraordinary. Astronomers have, for example, been
monitoring the orbits of one double neutron star system - known as PSR
1913+16 - for around 40 years. The emission of Einstein's predicted
gravitational waves from this system has been confirmed through a very
gradual shortening of the stars' orbital period, and there has been an
agreement between the signals received from space and the overall
predictions of Einstein's theory to an astonishing 14 decimal places.
At the other end of the size scale, there are multitudes of very
precise observations that give innumerable confirmations of the
accuracy of quantum theory and also of its generalisation to the
quantum theory of relativistic fields, which gives us quantum
electrodynamics. The magnetic moment of an electron, for example, has
been precisely measured to some 11 decimal places, and the observed
figures are matched precisely by the theoretical predictions of quantum
electrodynamics.
An important point to be made about these
physical theories is that they are not just enormously precise but
depend upon mathematics of very considerable sophistication. It would
be a mistake to think of the role of mathematics in basic physical
theory as being simply organisational, where the entities that
constitute the world just behave in one way or another, and our
theories represent merely our attempts - sometimes very successful - to
make some kind of sense of what is going on around us. In such a view
there would be no particular mathematical order to the world; it would
be we who, in a sense, impose this order by describing, in an elaborate
mathematical scheme, those aspects of the world's behaviour that we can
make sense of.
To me, such a description again falls far short
of explaining the extraordinary precision in the agreement between the
most remarkable of the physical theories that we have come across and
the behaviour of our material universe at its most fundamental levels.
Take, for another example, that most universal of physical influences,
gravitation. It operates across the greatest reaches of space, but as
early as the 17th century Newton had discovered that it was subject to
a beautifully simple mathematical description. This was later found to
remain accurate to a degree that is tens of thousands of times greater
than the observational precision available to Newton. In the 20th
century, Einstein gave us general relativity, providing insights at a
yet deeper level.
This theory involved considerably more
mathematical sophistication than Newton's: Newton had needed to
introduce the procedures of calculus in order to formulate his
gravitational theory, but Einstein added the sophistication of
differential geometry - and increased the agreement between theory and
observation by a factor of around 10 million. It should be made clear
that, in each case, the increased accuracy was not the result of a new
theory being introduced only to make sense of vast amounts of new data.
The extra precision was seen only after each theory had been produced,
revealing accord between physical behaviour at its deepest level and a
beautiful, sophisticated mathematical scheme.
If, as this
suggests, the mathematics is indeed there in the behaviour of physical
things and not merely imposed by us, then we must ask again what
substance does this "reality" that we see about us actually have? What,
after all, is the real table that I am now sitting at actually composed
of? It is made of wood, yes, but what is wood made of? Well, fibres
that were once living cells. And these? Molecules that are composed of
individual atoms. And the atoms? They have their nuclei, built from
protons and neutrons and glued together by strong nuclear forces; these
nuclei are orbited by electrons, held in by the considerably weaker
electromagnetic forces.
Going deeper, protons and neutrons are to
be thought of as composed of more elementary ingredients, quarks, held
together by further entities called gluons. Just what are electrons,
quarks and so on, though? The best we can do at this stage is simply to
refer to the mathematical equations that they satisfy, which for
electrons and quarks would be the Dirac equation. What distinguishes a
quark from an electron would be their very different masses and the
fact that quarks indulge in interactions - namely the "strong"
interactions - that electrons are blind to. What, then, are gluons?
They are "gauge" particles that mediate the strong force - which is
again a notion that can only be understood in terms of the mathematics
used to describe them.
Even if we accept that an electron, say,
should be understood as being merely an entity that is the solution of
some mathematical equation, how do we distinguish that electron from
some other electron? Here a fundamental principle of quantum mechanics
comes to our rescue. It asserts that all electrons are
indistinguishable from one another: we cannot talk of this electron and
that electron, but only of the system, which consists of a pair of
electrons, say, or a triple or a quadruple, and so on. Something very
similar applies to quarks or gluons or to any other specific kind of
particle. Quantum reality is strange that way.
Indeed, quantum
reality is strange in many ways. Individual quantum particles can, at
one time, be in two different places - or three, or four, or spread out
throughout some region, perhaps wiggling around like a wave. Indeed,
the "reality" that quantum theory seems to be telling us to believe in
is so far removed from what we are used to that many quantum theorists
would tell us to abandon the very notion of reality when considering
phenomena at the scale of particles, atoms or even molecules.
This
seems rather hard to take, especially when we are also told that
quantum behaviour rules all phenomena, and that even large-scale
objects, being built from quantum ingredients, are themselves subject
to the same quantum rules. Where does quantum non-reality leave off and
the physical reality that we actually seem to experience begin to take
over? Present-day quantum theory has no satisfactory answer to this
question.
My own viewpoint concerning this - and there are
many other viewpoints - is that present-day quantum theory is not quite
right, and that as the objects under consideration get more massive
then the principles of Einstein's general relativity begin to clash
with those of quantum mechanics, and a notion of reality that is more
in accordance with our experiences will begin to emerge. The reader
should be warned, however: quantum mechanics as it stands has no
accepted observational evidence against it, and all such modifications
remain speculative. Moreover, even general relativity, involving as it
does the idea of a curved space-time, itself diverges from the notions
of reality we are used to.
Whether we look at the universe at
the quantum scale or across the vast distances over which the effects
of general relativity become clear, then, the common-sense reality of
chairs, tables and other material things would seem to dissolve away,
to be replaced by a deeper reality inhabiting the world of mathematics.
Our mathematical models of physical reality are far from complete, but
they provide us with schemes that model reality with great precision -
a precision enormously exceeding that of any description that is free
of mathematics.
There seems every reason to believe that these
already remarkable schemes will be improved upon and that even more
elegant and subtle pieces of mathematics will be found to mirror
reality with even greater precision. Might mathematical entities
inhabit their own world, the abstract Platonic world of mathematical
forms? It is an idea that many mathematicians are comfortable with. In
this scheme, the truths that mathematicians seek are, in a clear sense,
already "there", and mathematical research can be compared with
archaeology; the mathematicians' job is to seek out these truths as a
task of discovery rather than one of invention. To a mathematical
Platonist, it is not so absurd to seek an ultimate home for physical
reality within Plato's world.
This is not acceptable to
everyone. Many philosophers, and others, would argue that mathematics
consists merely of idealised mental concepts, and, if the world of
mathematics is to be regarded as arising ultimately from our minds,
then we have reached a circularity: our minds arise from the
functioning of our physical brains, and the very precise physical laws
that underlie that functioning are grounded in the mathematics that
requires our brains for its existence. My own position is to avoid this
immediate paradox by allowing the Platonic mathematical world its own
timeless and locationless existence, while allowing it to be accessible
to us through mental activity. My viewpoint allows for three different
kinds of reality: the physical, the mental and the
Platonic-mathematical, with something (as yet) profoundly mysterious in
the relations between the three.
We do not properly understand
why it is that physical behaviour is mirrored so precisely within the
Platonic world, nor do we have much understanding of how conscious
mentality seems to arise when physical material, such as that found in
wakeful healthy human brains, is organised in just the right way. Nor
do we really understand how it is that consciousness, when directed
towards the understanding of mathematical problems, is capable of
divining mathematical truth. What does this tell us about the nature of
physical reality? It tells us that we cannot properly address the
question of that reality without understanding its connection with the
other two realities: conscious mentality and the wonderful world of mathematics.
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