this post was submitted on 23 Nov 2024
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[–] infinite_ass@leminal.space 6 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago) (1 children)

Imagine if particle physics got popularized for 10 centuries.

I believe that there are these tiny people called Quarks and they like to spin and have charming personalities

Astrology and religion seems like that. Something that once made sense and then got sorta socially digested.

[–] brsrklf@jlai.lu 3 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

10 centuries? It's way faster than that.

Have you seen all the "quantum" rebranding in today's pseudoscientific bullshit? You know the type, the assholes selling you magic baubles to rebalance your "energy levels", "detox" yourself etc.

[–] bunchberry@lemmy.world 1 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago)

ngl I blame physicists who communicate to the public for this

Notice how you always see a lot of nonsense mysticism around quantum mechanics like "quantum healing" but you never see anything along the lines of like "general relativity healing" or "inflation theory healing."

The difference is that often it is the physicists themselves who choose to communicate to the public who paint quantum mechanics in a mystical light. Indeed, this is not even something unique to the physicists who communicate to the public, you can sometimes even run into it in peer-reviewed publications painting QM as a theory that somehow puts conscious observers front and center and questions the existence of objective reality, or whatever rubbish philosophy people try to imbue onto some linear algebra.

The ones who communicate to the public just are often worse because they don't tell you QM as it really is, they usually tell you some personal theory they have. For example, rather than just describing how QM works, one of these science communicators might tell you their personal theory about how there's a grand multiverse, or that "consciousness" plays some sort of role, and that explains why QM works. They do not just present the theory, but their own personal speculation as an underlying explanation for it.

Because physicists themselves promote all this mysticism around a bunch of linear algebra, you end up with mystics and charlatans who realize that they can take advantage of this by talking about mystical nonsense like "quantum healing." Sure, it might be nonsensical rubbish, but the person who hears about "quantum healing" also heard a real PhD physicist tell them about multiverses and "consciousness," so they think there must be something to it as well. It gives the mysticism an air of legitimacy.

We like to kid ourselves that the mysticism is just promoted by your Deepak Chopra types or laymen who have no idea what they're talking about. But if you actually look at what a real academic philosophy department publishes, there is mysticism all throughout academic philosophy. These philosophers have also had a big impact on physicists, who often adopt these mystical attitudes they learn from the philosophy department into their own discussion, and sometimes even into their own publications.

If you actually talk to the laymen who are deeply enthralled by those quantum mystic pseudoscience charlatans, they usually can point you to multiple real academics who back their beliefs, people with legitimate credentials. This is a problem nobody seems to address and it annoys the hell out of me. Everyone paints either the charlatans or the laymen as the bad guy here, but nobody wants to talk about the elephant in the room which is the rampant mysticism in academia.

I literally argued with a PhD physicist the other day who was going around preaching to people that quantum mechanics proves that there is no physical reality and we all live inside of a "cosmic consciousness." I did not get very far with him because he just insulted me and pointed to academic philosophers who agreed with him and said I'm stupid for even questioning his claims, and then wouldn't address my criticisms.