A Critique of Relativity and Localization: - E. T. Gendlin
A Critique of Relativity and Localization: - E. T. Gendlin
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E. T. GENDLIN
Committee on Methodology
Department of Behavioral Sciences
University of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA
J. LEMKE
Brooklyn College
City University of New York
Brooklyn, New York 11210, USA
Mathematical Modelling, Vol. 4, pp. 61-72. 1983 Printed in the USA. All rights reserved.
Copyright 1983 Pergamon Press Ltd.
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SECTION I
From one philosophical analysis 1 it follows that spatial location, point in time, and the
identity of a single particle should be definable only retroactively, from processes of
change. We predict that physics must eventually give up pointwise localization in space
and time and single, noninteracting particle states. There will always be two or more
particles, and their definitions, as well as those of places and times, will be definable only
backwards, from interaction.
Einstein's2 special theory of relativity already denies the definability of a space or time
point without reference to the space and time of some observer. Absolute space and time
points do not exist uniquely. The transformation equations named for Lorentz are a set of
rules to transform observations made relative to one observer into those made relative to
another observer. But in these equations all parameters in each observer's system are still
formulated along classical lines, namely as attached to independent single points of space
and time. Thus, for each observer system, the concepts of space, time, and single particle
are still quite as absolute as those of Newton.
If it were true, as we will try to show, that single space and time points and a single
particle are in some way inadmissible, a basic change would be involved also in the
conception of certain phenomena. In relativity, a special place is assigned to the class of
phenomena which are used to signal from one observer to another (light is the usual
example). The properties of these signal phenomena are constrained by the role they are
made to play in the theory, a role dictated by what remains of absolute space and time in
the theory. These properties are not of empirical origin, but are forced on these
phenomena in order to make possible the signaling between two classical observers.
It may well be. therefore, that if we decide to give up the vestige of absolute space and
time, we should also find our description of these phenomena closer to the minimal
empirical description. Their role as possible signals in relativity introduces speculative
features in a theory still using absolute space and time, features which we will attempt to
isolate and remove.
We began with this lead, that features due to the role of reconciling absolute space and
time systems are speculative and open to chat. We found by separating out just these
features we were also separating out just those unjustified assumptions most responsible
for present difficulties in physics.
2
Let us now examine in detail what seems to be a basic philosophical inconsistency of
relativity, and then pursue its effects in recent anomalies in more detail.
The "signal properties of light" are due to its carrying of "information." The classical
notion of "information" contains a contradiction: information is purely about one point in
space and time. Information is supposedly purely about there and then, and yet it would
not be information if it were not had by someone who is somewhere else. "Information"
is supposedly both had somewhere, and yet also supposedly purely about one place
somewhere else. Relativity keeps this point character of information.
Light is made to embody the difficulty of two or more space-time location systems
(observer coordinate frames). That each space-time system remains as is, and only their
relation via signaling is affected is insured, but leads to the need for a sharp maximum
signal speed, c, such that
c vREL = c
In relativity, the parameters are still single point descriptions, e.g., field strengths, A(x1
t). Relativity falls short of reformulating the parameters themselves, so that they would
no longer be about independent single points.
Now, if quantum theory is a body of theory and empirical data whose parametrization
always involves more than one point, i.e., interactions, then we would expect relativity to
contradict quantum theory exactly in those respects in which relativity requires single
point descriptions and in the respects in which it forces certain speculative properties on
light (or other vsignal = c phenomena), to enable it to signal between such single points. It
follows that whatever results from the information contradiction in relativity should be
unnecessary and troublesome.
Let us now examine more closely what is involved in space and time points. The labeling
of phenomena by space and time must always be the function of someone who compares.
A compares marks off one motion on another. The intervals during which one motion
occurs, as marked off on another motion, say something about their comparison. They
say nothing about each motion. Thus, if a given motion's duration is expressed in terms of
revolutions of the earth, or divisions thereof, the expression in days or hours says
something about the compares who has expressed one motion in terms of parts of the
other. Nothing is thereby said about each motion as an empirical phenomenon. Rather,
this interval parametrization of motions says something about the comparer's activity, and
depends upon the motion used as a standard in relation to the other motion being
compared.
Motions so compared are not actually interacting with each other in any way, nor is the
observer impinging on either. Thus, time point definition already involves adding
3
something to the description of phenomena, in regard to which the phenomena are in fact
neutral.
Similarly, a space location system is the product of an observer who relates different
observables to each other in terms of the direction from the observer to them. A motion
can then be described in terms of other phenomena which define a space interval.
The interval covered is expressed in terms of other phenomena. These do not interact
with the given motion and it is neutral with respect to them. The same interval
supposedly exists without the motion.
Thus motions are described in terms of static points derived from intervals between other
phenomena with which the given motion is not in interaction.
But have we not lost something by all this? How shall we distinguish between an object
in motion and one at rest in each successive location? In interval parameters there is no
way to formulate the question, but if our hand were on the object we would know which
case obtained. But there is, of course, a parameter which expresses this difference:
momentum, a dynamic (interactional) rather than kinematic (interval) parameter.
As we saw, space and time location descriptions are artificial in the sense of relating,
comparing, putting into interaction of an unreal sort, two phenomena or more which are
not actually in interaction. Thus, the space-time descriptions do not distinguish between
events actually in interaction with each other and events only being compared. The space-
time description neutrally assigns relation to phenomena that are not relating, and
conversely, also describes interactions as though they were merely intervals or
comparisons.
In quantum theory, on the other hand, the basic concept is that of interaction; and, we
will argue, it is natural in quantum theories to regard location and time as derivative from
interaction, and to distinguish actual interaction from mere comparison.
Interaction is essentially a here-there A-B concept, labeled always by more than one
parameter of each type (or equivalently by relative parameters, such as angles).
Quantum theory does not require the assumptions of an absolute space-time with
independent point-locations. More than that, it enables us to describe actual interactions,
of which, it would seem, space-time location is a kind of artificial copy. For example, the
comparer assigns space interval description to some motion, in terms of the change in
4
angle by which he can locate it. >From the start to the end the motion defines for the
comparer an angle. But this is no real angle of some interaction descriptive of the motion.
Rather, the angle describes the observer's attempt to interact with the motion. Does the
observer succeed in actually interacting with it? If not, then nothing empirical is said
about a motion by the space location the comparer attempts to foist on it, as an artificial
interaction. If yes, then only is the angle of empirical import, but then also the angle
describes some change, and cannot be reduced to a mere empty interval of a static
comparison system.
If space and time location intervals are viewed as angles of would-be interactions, and
not that interactions go on "in" static space and time interval systems, then at least we
can argue that the dynamic (interactional) parameters are primary, and the kinematic
(location) parameters must be taken out of the way descriptions are fundamentally
fashioned. But in conventional theories which are built to accord with relativity (local
field theories), the assumptions of kinematics are built into the descriptive parameters.
One should therefore expect to find that these are troublesome features.
What is more. it is possible that the Lorentz transformations themselves will become
understandable and derivative if we consider space-time intervals as artificial interaction
and their actual measurement as an actual interaction.
Currently. the space-time systems (and their transformations) are taken as the most
general and overall requirements. within which interactions are made to be placed. We
propose reversing this and making actual interaction land dynamic parameters only) the
more General framework within which measurements are one kind. Space-time location
parameters of actual interactions would be derived from actual interactions.
Let us look more carefully at this "comparison" nature of time and space which we have
been calling artificial.
Time enters our theories at first as a parameter for the comparison of motions. A standard
motion is chosen (falling sand, dripping water, the apparent motion of the sun) and all
other motions are marked-off upon it, the moments of their commencement and
termination. Thus, time intervals are introduced: and we end by assuming that all motions
may be consistently represented in a single intercomparing system. Time interval is thus
reducible to length. a difference in position of the system whose motion is our standard
(the clock face, height in a cylinder, etc.). Even if the system is not a body in motion (say
a light that periodically changes its color through the spectrum), there will always be an
analogue of the length, the difference in position (here, the difference in color): and we
require only that it be possible to define an equality of differences that is independent of
where (or when, or at what color) the motion observed begins and ends. It is furthermore
assumed in classical theories, including relativity. that this independence of when during
the standard motion an interval is chosen, so far as its length in comparison to intervals
beginning at other times is concerned, allows us to imagine that everywhere in the
universe, and at all times, the unit interval is defined, provided only that it is defined once
and somewhere. This last assumption is far from a trivial one, as was demonstrated by
5
Hermann Weyl early in the century. 3 He showed that the assumptions restricted the
freedom of the theory by as many parameters as are required to represent all of
electromagnetism. This is because, without the assumption, we are free to redefine the
unit interval of distance and of time at every point of space-time.
This view of space and time, however. with all the classical assumptions, seems to have
reduced all motion to a mere comparison of intervals. The difference is interaction (or
possible interaction, as we will see below). Physics recognizes a distinction between
kinematic and dynamic statements. Locations at successive times are only so many units
of an observer's arbitrary space per so many units of his equally arbitrary time. This
description is purely kinematic. On the other hand, what distinguished motion from
statics is impulse, change and transfer of momentum. Momentum always concerns
interaction, transfer of momentum or impulse. It is always at least two momenta which
are relevant to an interaction (see Fig. 1). A single momentum may be thought of as
partial information about possible interactions with another momentum.
It is worth exploiting the concept of momentum as a true interaction concept to see how it
can help us avoid the usual space-time (kinematic) ways of thinking.
6
Let us view the momentum of a body as describing in part what we may expect if the
body were to interact with another whose momentum is also specified. Momenta were
invented only to be used in conjunction with other momenta; it is sums of momenta
which are conserved, and it is the relative momentum transferred during an interaction
which is an essential parameter describing an interaction. Thus, "momentum of a single
particle" can be viewed as stating many possible specified interactions with a particle of
another momentum.
In the same way, the momentum of a particle also tells the possible interactions from
which it might have emerged with its present momentum. Of course, any of these would
have changed its velocity and direction, so that it now appears to be "coming from" a
place at which it never was! Its momentum, therefore, does not really tell us where and
when it was, but only about interactions that could have made it now seem to be coming
out of the given direction with the given velocity.
Any actual interaction thus generates for the particle a new set of possible interactions
from which it could have come and could be entering further into. It thus generates a
system of places and times at which it seems to have been and seems going to be. Any
further actual interaction will change this system into another one.
But now, which is more basic? Will, as the above shows, the space and time point
systems be derivative from an actual interaction? Or must we place actual interactions
(and the systems before and after it) into one consistent overarching system of space and
time points?
It should be clear that it cannot be the latter because, as we just showed, the space and
time system is not literal for the particle but is only an expression of the interaction it
comes from. Rather than saying the interaction it comes from, a system of spaces and
times is laid out behind it, from which it does not actually come.
A point of view somewhat like ours has been developed recently from other arguments
by Julian Schwinger in his sourcery theory.4
There is little reason to want actual interaction and its generating of space and time
systems still to go on in a space and time point system. Rather, actual interaction should
have precedence and can redefine space and time points. (The actual interaction could be
one of measurement.)
Relativity can be retained to deal with the relations added onto phenomena by observers,
without requiring that such considerations be the widest system within which all other
descriptions must conform. Instead, we can make the Lorentz equations a limiting case of
more general relations defined by interactions.
We would predict that conventional theories will break down if they try to satisfy the
Lorentz equations during an interaction as though the interaction occurred in space-time
in antecedent locations corrected by the equations. In our view. interaction is not
7
localized (tied to single points of space and time). but defines slots or channels
characteristic of the interaction. which are then spoken of as particles.
For Newton, the connection between kinematic parameters and dynamics was
accomplished by introducing the idea of mass. It was mass which made bodies more than
mere time and space points in the comparing system. In the classical system, a particle
was regarded as a single moving mass point; that is to say, it was regarded kinematically
in terms of the absolute space-time, and the notion of mass was included to allow for the
dynamics. Modern theories are stated directly in terms of momentum. To do so fully
would alter the notion of "particle." We would retain "mass," or the dynamical aspects it
was intended to include, of course, but would eliminate the "point" aspect of particle or
mass point. To define particle independently of motion through space-time (the artificial
interactions of the comparer), we redefine it. We mean by particle a characteristic set of
parameters in the descriptions of an interaction, for example, those of a resonant
amplitude for an interaction of A and B in a definite quantum state, which characterize in
conventional terms the particle C. We call such interaction parameter sets, "interaction
slots."
The abstraction of the free particle, the particle not in interaction, is intimately connected
with the presuppositions of an absolute space-time. In our sense it is therefore speculative
and unnecessary, and where it appears in conventional theories we will suspect (and find)
trouble. It is another consequence, perhaps the most important, of the older view. Only if
space-time is taken to be an antecedent system of points both independent and more basic
than the interactions said to go on "in" it, is the unequivocal path defining a particle in the
old conception necessary, and a prior condition to be satisfied. Instead of single points of
space and time, particles are groups of interaction slots characterizing each kind of
interaction. One can then define a particle coming into an interaction either as a slot in
that interaction or as a slot in the previous interaction, and these would be translatable
into different derived space-time location systems.
SECTION II
A host of anomalies can be predicted. found, and understood from this critique. We find
them just where we expect them, namely wherever the requirements of single point space
and time systems are put ahead of the requirements of interaction descriptions.
Frequently the difficulty arises with one of the manifestations of single point systems,
namely the single particle as a lone traveler in single point space-time. The view that a
single particle traveling alone, and its path, should be definable already implies that
single point space-time systems are preeminent, and that interactions must be described
within such a system (or within corrections for two such systems). We have shown, on
the other hand, that particles can be considered as interaction slots, as basically not alone,
and that therefore a single particle is a partial expression of some actual interaction.
8
After presenting the following list of anomalies we will return to our main discussion in
Sec. III.
Consider first a simple example from quantum theory. A free particle with definite
momentum (the interaction parameter) must be described by a wave infinite in extent in
space. This means there is no greater probability of finding the particle here than there. or
even at infinity. In practice, "wave packets" or other localizable descriptions are
concocted to avoid such difficulties, but the connection between definite momentum and
an unlocalizable state is fundamental. In the limit of definite momentum the state
becomes nonlocalizable; the theoretician must impose the localization. This is in sharp
contrast to an interacting particle. If the electron is bound in a hydrogen atom by its
interaction with a proton, which interaction is ongoing and not momentary, actual and not
merely artificial, then it has very definite localization properties definable in terms of
(and derivative from) energy parameters of the bound system. The interaction generates
the possibility of meaningful space-time measurements on the system. The space-time
parametrization is complicated, the energy (interaction) description a much simpler way
of looking at this system. The average spatial extension of a hydrogen atom can be
defined; one defines it from the parameters of the electro-magnetic interaction observed
(masses, charges, universal constants defining the units) and parameters of the interaction
A-B, electron-proton, energy EAB and relative angular momentum lAB. The spatial
extension of a free particle is not a meaningful question as no actual interval has been
generated by any interaction.
The mathematical absurdities and other problems which arise in quantum theory from the
assumption of free particles support our view that the free particle is one instance of
speculative results imputed from space-time comparison systems and their artificial
space-time points. It seems that on-mass-shell (free) single particles have had a special
(real) status in our theories. only because we have given an unjustifiable role to single
free particles in our thinking.
Our analysis predicts trouble spots in an uncanny way, we find them if we continue to
look where absolute spacetime points and their relativity corrections are imposed. We
find another such example in local fields, the name given to the mathematical function
which defines the probability that particles of given quantum numbers (charge, mass, spin,
etc.) will be created or destroyed at given points of space and time. Quantum field theory
postulates that at every point of space and time one can define such a probability. As we
would have predicted for space-time point definitions, the local field theories do not work!
The theory produces only free particle fields. A realistic equation for interacting particle
fields has never been solved.
Looking further, we note that these free fields cannot be chosen in certain, perhaps
desirable, ways because the relativity postulates restrict the possible choices so much that,
for all practical purpose, they determine them completely. The Lorentz transformations
are called point transformations; and it is their point-for-point character which requires
the point-by-point definition of the free fields, and leads to their "local" character, their
being defined with reference to space and time.
9
Once again then, space-time as viewed in relativity, and the free particle concept, are
seen to be part of the same conceptual scheme, and both suspect. Furthermore, Feynman's
interaction rules (for the interaction of electrons with light) which are successful are in a
form that can avoid all reference to space-time and work only in terms of interaction
variables, as we have defined them. When his solutions are formulated in space-time
variables, they become extremely complicated mathematically; and their derivation from
field theory is beset by problems.
We would expect further difficulties where relativity forces certain characteristics upon
light, to make up for the needs of two space-time comparison systems, which
characteristics then are maintained for light generally. Photons have to be assigned a zero
rest mass, to insure their required signalling properties. Thus. any amount of energy,
however small, is enough to produce arbitrary quantities of light quanta (E = mc2, where
m = 0). Other particles, such as the neutrino, also have rest mass = 0, but the difficulty of
producing arbitrary numbers of them from arbitrarily small energies does not arise. Why
not? Because neutrinos occur only in conjunction with some other particle (possibly an
antineutrino), with a finite threshold for production. Thus it is again the supposedly single
particle which is making the difficulty. As we emphasize, a particle makes sense only in
relation to a partner, i.e., in interaction variables. Only derivatively from such interaction,
and in it, can the particle be treated as "one at a time."
Photons were invented to account for the seeming localization of their energy and
momentum in experiments where they interact with electrons. In such interactions they
are localizable. Extending the localization demands to free particles, free photons, should
make anomalies. It does. It is well known that there is no space-time probability (no wave
function) for a photon. Thus it is not localizable at all. But, conversely, the experiments
with photons and electrons in interaction, just mentioned, can also be accounted for quite
accurately without a localized photon.
Furthermore, we note that zero mass, unpaired-type solutions of the free particle
equations and point local field theories lead to still another difficulty: the divergence
problem (absurd results such as the infinite mass of particles and in general many infinite
values for observably finite quantities).
Thus, we find again that insisting on the speculative space--time formalism rather than
the priority of interaction leads to unneeded complications and internal contradictions.
We found them where we expected them when we pursued these speculative
requirements.
Similar arguments can be made briefly for some other well-known difficulties in
conventional theory. In field theory, for example, Haag's theorems5 and related results
establish that there is no acceptable correspondence (unitary transformation) between
free-particle fields and the interacting-particle fields when we include interaction in the
time-evolution of the system. Streater and Wightman find this "awkward" and "very
inconvenient" [5, pp. 166-68]. We interpret it as the inadequacy of field theories to
10
describe essential features of interactions by a formalism based on free particles and local
fields.
Another theorem within local field theory, the CPT theorem, requires the universality of
the CPT (antiparticle-plus-space reflection-plus-time reversal) symmetry of local
interactions, where each field is evaluated at the same space-time point, as a consequence
of locality and relativity postulates. In such theories, it is postulated that there is a local
point-to-point causality condition, which we would not expect to hold for infinitesimally
near points x, y, for interacting fields. Empirically, it may well be that there are systems
which cannot be fit to this procrustean bed, e.g., weak interactions in K-meson decays.
There one observes a violation of part of the CPT symmetry (CP), but no compensating
direct violation of the T-symmetry is known which would restore the supposedly
universal CPT.
The spin-statistics theorem, deriving from these same postulates, has also run into a
possible exception. It seems to occur precisely in a situation where the possibility of
particles existing in free states is problematic: spin and statistics for the quarks.6 The
quark statistics anomaly is currently circumvented by the assumption that free particle
quark states are impossible because of the nature of the quark interaction!
In the unitarity equation, interactions connecting initial and final states (i and f) in one
process must agree with those connecting each to all possibly other intermediate states.
Maximal analyticity limits the set of possible intermediate states, we believe, in such a
way that they are not a sufficient set to allow us to satisfy the unitarity equation. The
states are limited to those that qualify as "asymptotic scattering states" (in-states and out-
states) in which the effects of interaction are neglected asymptotically (compare free-
particle states). In quantum electrodynamics, Dirac points out, you cannot neglect
interaction in this way; he rejects the whole approach.7 We suspect that even in strong
interactions the effects of dynamics in the interaction region can never be accounted for
entirely in terms of the limited set of states conventionally allowed. (This is tantamount
to rejecting asymptotic completeness.)
What would be the effect of allowing states that do not correspond to free particles, i.e.,
ones that appear only in the interaction region but do not have a scattering state as an
asymptotic limit? What would such states be like? What kind of theory naturally provides
them'' Would they help resolve the problems we have identified as being due to the
speculative assumptions of relativity and localization that have formerly excluded them?
11
The states of interacting systems, we propose, are to be built up out of the complete set of
basis states, both those which are analogues of what are now called free particles, and the
nonasymptotic states as well. In S-matrix language, the nonasymptotic states are
necessary for completeness in the sense of full unitarity; but they give contributions
which violate maximal analyticity, and thus introduce violations of microcausality, within
the interaction region. Nonlocal field theories provide states that are nonasymptotic in the
S-matric sense, i.e., do not appear as in-states or out-states.
Very little is known about nonlocal field theories, except that they have been considered
physically unacceptable. However, acceptable nonlocal field theories could be
constructed if we refuse to be limited by the strictures of relativity, free particles, and the
limitation on signal velocity. Many nonlocal field theories, like the form factor theory for
weak processes of Pietzschmann 8 , suffer from well known limitations, including a
macrocausality violation. But nonlocal theories, it appears, do not need to suffer these
troubles. Indeed, well-behaved nonlocal theories which have been studied provide one of
the most striking agreements with the consequences of the analysis given so far in this
paper. In the work of Heisenberg9, Kirzhnitz10, and very recently, Sudarshan11, a very
striking common feature has emerged from three different attacks on this problem. It
appears that all self-consistent nonlocal field theories are of one type: those which require
the introduction of states (as the analogues of particles or fields) which would not be
admissible as free particles (not ordinary asymptotic states).
These states (shadow states, ghost states) may have complex mass:
Mc= = M0 + iM0.
The imaginary mass can correspond to faster-than-light particles (if allowed as free
particles, which we would not have). Mechanisms can be provided that appear to confine
acausal effects to microscopic regions, especially in indefinite metric nonlocal theories.10
11 12 13
Analyticity is probably not maintained, but unitarity can be satisfied, though one
must reconsider asymptotic completeness as a condition 14 , as we would expect. The
complete sets of states now add to the scattering states the nonasymptotic ones, and these
new states may have complex eigenvalues of energy, rest mass and may have negative
norm in the metric space.
In these alternative theories, most of which were in fact developed to deal with
divergence problems and other pathologies of local field theories, one can picture
analyticity modified in the interaction region by the existence there of new types of states
and fields that introduce violations of microcausality. Within regions of order of size of
some fundamental length in processes where interaction energies are high and
approaching some cutoff value, the effect of the new states tends to make all points
within the region equivalent: there would be no separation of information at one point
from that at another in the region, the "points" would be in effectively instantaneous
communication.
12
Such a picture is paradoxical when we fall back on our speculative notions of points, free
particles, etc. Ultimately, even the maniacal theories with their new states only patch up
the holes in the usual fabric of theories derived from relativity and localization. If the
topology of space-time is to be derived from interaction, interactions must be written
down in terms that allow more general topologies. Our arguments suggest that this will
not be done so long as interactions are considered to go on in a prior space-time. When
we can formulate them in "internal" spaces of their own parameters, we would expect to
find that we can derive a spacetime whose topology is effectively similar to that
suggested by these descriptions of alternative hypotheses to local, relativistic field
theories and S-matrix theories.
SECTION III
Our examples have shown that there is indeed trouble exactly where the requirements of
single point space-time are imposed as superior to the requirements of interaction. In
many cases (for instance the maniacal models), the needed interaction descriptions
already exist but are held inadmissible because of the old view. It would thus have
important consequences for theory building if, as we propose, interaction were
considered basic and space-time location derivative. It would mean that the requirements
of the latter could no longer limit the former.
Our analysis has shown that space-time point systems are intercomparison systems. A
comparer considers all phenomena marked off on all other phenomena (each is thus
assumed to be indefinitely divisible-hence points), and the total system of these intervals
is the space-time point system.
We showed that such comparison intervals are artificial interactions. Space and time
parameters are derivable from interactions. They can be derived from actual interactions.
Or they can be derived from the artificial interactions of the assumed interval system of
all compared to all. The comparer pretends that for each motion he has taken all others
and marked them off on it, and hence all its points have been generated. But these points
are a purely speculative set, the comparer has not really compared all phenomena and
even the few he has compared have not actually interacted. By marking one motion off
on another, the comparer does not make actual interaction between them, nor, unless he
freshly measures, is there interaction between himself and them.
Why should this purely speculative set of artificial would-be interaction intervals and
their points be considered a system of primary reality lasting across interactions, and to
which all interactions must consistently conform?
Our first conclusion, therefore, is that where a conflict arises, the space-time-particle
description generated by actual interaction ought to take precedence over the nonactual
interval system of comparers, as well as over the requirements of harmonizing more than
one such comparer.
13
Therefore, where it is currently desirable to employ descriptions of interactions that
violate the requirements of point-systems and free particles, we have proposed lifting
these restrictions.
Our second, more strident conclusion is that single points and single particles are an
impossibility. They result from first setting up comparison systems, then reversing things
and making the terminal points of the comparison intervals basic as if they had been
antecedent and independent. The single particle traveling freely has to he recognized as
hypothesizing the single point and path of points.
"This" particle is identifiable as different from other of the same sort only in and by some
interaction. The free particle is defined by the nonactual interaction of antecedent space
and time points (it is the one at a given space and time point).
Thus, the absolutely existing "this particle" is as nonactual as the points which identify it.
Only actual interaction can identify a particle. Therefore, only interacting particles are
possible; and a single particle is a partial description of an interaction, an interaction slot.
Thirdly, we conclude that actual interaction can alter the system of space-time points. We
saw that even in classical physics momentum could be described as a system of would-be
interactions from which a particle could have court and into which it could go. Such
systems of would-be interactions are only again another type of nonactual interactions
similar to those of the comparers. An actual interaction changes a particle's momentum
and thereby changes the whole system of past and future would-be interactions because it
changes the velocity and direction. Therefore, it is clear that an actual interaction is not
simply one of those many wouldbe interactions, the one that occurred. To so view it is
again to make the system of would-be interactions prior and more basic than actual
interactions. We would reverse this order and allow an actual interaction to generate a
space-time system. This view, while alien to most of current thinking in physics, is at the
heart of gravitational theories, in which the properties of spacetime (e.g., the metric) are
derived from interactions by way of the energy tensor.
It must be kept in view that parameters like frequency, wavelength, momentum, and
velocity, involve space and time but are determinable from interaction. Thus, interactions
can generate space and time but have not been thought of as generative in this way
because, instead, they were thought of as having to go on in, and conform to, antecedent
spare and time.
If there were no difference between would-be interactions and actual ones, the actual
interaction would simply be one of those already included in the system of possible
interactions (which a momentum states) for a particle. When it actually happened it
would leave the basic system of possible interactions undisturbed, that is to say the
changes due to the interaction would be located within that system and would change
details within it, but not the system.
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The space-time derived from the interaction is different from that before the interaction,
in which it was only a would-be interaction among others.
Relativity would be viewed as having taken a first step in recognizing that space-time
point systems are a function of a comparer. The second step would be to recognize that
actual interactions are superior to would-be interactions (such as comparisons and places
and times of possible interactions).
This analysis also indirectly supports the philosophical model from which it arose1. Since
the difficulties do appear just where the analysis would lead one to expect them, some
credence is given to the philosophical model from which the analysis stems. The model is
one of process and takes its rise from a conception of knowledge as "explication," rather
than as a copy of reality. In explication, "retroactive time" is the rule rather than an
anomaly. One always asserts now what earlier phenomena "were." When this is projected
on linear point time, it gives the impression of time doubling back on itself, as it would
certainly seem to do if an interaction were described as occurring in an independent, prior
space-time which can only be derived by working back from what is really prior
interaction itself.
15
REFERENCES
1
E. Gendlin, Experiencing and the Creation of Meaning, Free Press, New York (1962);
Revised Edition (1970).
2
A. Einstein, Annalen der Physik 17, 891 (1905).
3
H. Weyl, Sitzungsberichte der preussichen Akad. d. Wissenschften, p. 465 (1918); Phys.
Zeits. 22, 473 (1921); see also A. S. Eddington. Mathematical Theory of Relativity p. 200,
Cambridge University Press, New York (1960).
4
J. Schwinger, Particles. Sources, and Fields, pp. 24, 34-38, Addison-Wesley. Reading,
MA (1970).
5
R Haag, Kgl. Danske Videsnnskab Selskab, Nat. Fys Medd. 29, 12 (1955); R. F.
Streater and A. S. Wightman, PCT. Spin-Statistics, and All That. Benjamin, New York
(1964).
6
R. H. Dalitz, High Energy Physics, Gordon and Breech. New York (1965). The results
of Mitra and Majumdar [Phys. Rev. 150, 1194 (1966)] show that Fermi statistics for
quarks leads to charge distributions within the proton that strongly disagree wish
experiment.
7
P. A. M. Dirac. Lectures on Quantum Field Theory, Harper and Row (1962).
8
H. Peitschmann, Universitat Wien reprint (1970).
9
W. Heisenberg, Rev. Mod. Phys. 29. 269 (1957).
10
D. A. Kirzhnits, Soviet Physics Usekhi 9, 692 (1967).
11
E. C. G. Sudarshan, Proceedings of the 14th Solvay Conference, pp. 98-115,
Interscience, London (1968).
12
T. D. Lee and G. C. Wick, Nuclear Physics B 9, 209 (This discussion of negative
metric theories assumes a unitary S-matrix).
13
R. Oehme, in Quanta, P. G. O. Freund et al., eds., pp. 309-338. University of Chicago
Press (1970).
14
R. Marnelius, Phys. Rev. D 10, 3411-3430 (1974).
16