I think physicists like to think of the universe through a “natural laws” perspective, where things should work the same whether or not they were there to look at them. So, it seems strange when things do work differently when they look at them.
Thanks for the feedback! I agree. It’s just that if we think of humans and wave functions as both being manifestations of the same pool of interacting information, then it seems less surprising that our actions (like in measuring wave functions) would be connected to the behavior of wave functions. That “surprise” is something I think we could overcome if we communicated more clearly.
I think physicists like to think of the universe through a “natural laws” perspective, where things should work the same whether or not they were there to look at them. So, it seems strange when things do work differently when they look at them.
Thanks for the feedback! I agree. It’s just that if we think of humans and wave functions as both being manifestations of the same pool of interacting information, then it seems less surprising that our actions (like in measuring wave functions) would be connected to the behavior of wave functions. That “surprise” is something I think we could overcome if we communicated more clearly.
I’m maybe “explaining” what you were already aware of, and just elaborating upon. Sorry. Anyway, you made an excellent point! Thank you!