What is back-reaction?
The following is a posting to the QUANTUM-D list from 
Rhett Savage entitled
"What is back-reaction?" (February 19th, 1996) 
This message presents portions of a conversation had by Stanley 
Jeffers and Jack Sarfatti, with my comments strewn throughout...
Also discussed is a paper of Henry Stapp's. This is a follow up 
to Sarfatti's posting "Is Consciousness a Violation of Quantum 
Mechanics?" which is at:
http://www.teleport.com/~rhett/quantum-d/posts/sarf_1-25-96.html
Sarfatti wrote that people such as Josephson, Stapp, Penrose and
others have suggested changes in quantum theory which allow for 
the possibility of "intent" or the like to bias quantum outcomes, 
but that all these authors operate using the Copenhagen picture 
in which there really is a "collapse" of the wavefunction. Jack
advocates a Bohmian picture in which both wave and particle are 
always real and there is no collapse. So how does mind enter the 
world? It must have been here from the start. Jack describes an 
explicit dualism in which both mind and matter exist... 
 "In accord with Chalmer's idea, I posit that the wavefunction  
  is intrinsically 'mental' capable of qualia." 
          ...and he suggests equating the guiding wave in Bohmian 
mechanics with the mental aspect of the universe, generally: the
particles are "matter," "mind" the pilot-wave. 
That might be uninteresting except for the next step: the "mental" 
aspect of the universe can be upgraded to life and consciousness 
by self-organization. This happens when a physical system uses its 
own nonlocality in its organization. In this case a feedback loop 
is created, as follows: the system configures itself so as to set
up its own Bohmian pilot wave, which in turn directly affects its 
physical configuration which then affects its nonlocal pilot wave 
which affects the configuration, etc...  
Normally in quantum mechanics this "back-action" is not taken into 
account. The wave guides the particles but the back-action of the 
particle onto the wave is not systematically calculated - of course,
the back-reaction is physically real: the movement of the particle
determines the initial conditions of the next round of calculation.
But there is no systematic way to characterize such feedback. One 
reason that this works in practice is that for systems that are not 
selforganizing the back-action may not exert any systematic effect.  
This is an interesting way to utilize nonlocality despite Eberhard's 
proof that point-to-point signaling by the quantum connection is not 
in the cards! (If a physical system occupied a dynamical stability 
based on such a feedback loop then it would be a "nonlocal" physical
system, without superluminal signals.)  
Questions of consciousness aside, consideration of "back-action" as 
a dynamical fact nourishes a suspicion that linear quantum theory is 
fundamentally an approximation... 
On 1/28, Stanley Jeffers wrote:
>    I would like to offer the following comments on Jack Sarfatti's 
> recent post (Jan 25,1996) of his abstract "Is Consciousness a  
> Violation of Quantum Mechanics?" 
> 
> > Bohm showed that the Schroedinger equation and the Born 
> > probability interpretation of orthodox quantum  mechanichs 
 
> > depend upon the approximation that there is a new kind of 
> > "organic" or "wholistic" non-local and context-dependant 
> > "quantum force" that the wave function exerts on matter  
> > in addition to the electro-weak, strong and gravitational 
> > forces... 
>  
> There is no such approximation involved in Bohm's analysis.  Starting  
> with a real wave given by psi=R exp(iS/h), the Schroedinger equation 
> separates into two equations, one of which is a continuity equation in 
> R squared. The other looks, for all the world, like a Hamilton-Jacobi 
> equation but includes a quantum potential term which is independent of 
> the amplitude of psi and distance. The analysis is exact  and does not 
> depend on any approximations.  
In an ensuing discussion Jack vigorously clarified his intent... 
Sarfatti: "The Schrodinger equation implies a sourceless continuity 
  equation.  That is the absence of backaction. I can cite the specific 
  places where Bohm introduces the idea. Backaction would be a source 
  term on the right-hand side of the continuity equation which depends 
  on the actual trajectory of the physical system."  
Jeffers: "I repeat that there are no approximations involved in Bohm's 
  analysis of the Schroedinger equation.   
  The exact analysis is given as appendix A in Chapter 3 of Peter 
  Holland's excellent book, The Quantum Theory of Motion."  
Sarfatti:"Well you asked for it. First look at section 9 in Bohm's 
  first hv paper in the Wheeler Zurek book on Quantum Measurement  
  (Princeton).  
  Second, look at the way Bohm uses "inhomogeneities" in section 4 of 
  that same paper. That term is same as what I mean by "back-action". 
  Third, p 30 of Undivided Universe asserts "the Schrodinger equation 
  for the quantum field does not have sources, nor does it have any 
  other way by which the field could be directly affected by the 
  condition of the particles....." 
  In other words the Schrodinger equation is based upon the assumption 
  of zero back-action! Stanley is dead wrong and should apologize if 
  he is a gentleman."  
Being a gentleman among other things, Stanley did apologize (after a
fashion)...  
Jeffers: "I now have a clearer sense of Jack's point. His initial  
  claim was not that Bohm made any approximations in his analysis 
  but that something is missing from the Schroedinger equation which 
  could represent an interaction between particle and wave..." 
Sarfatti: "Yes, that is correct."  
 
Jeffers:  "...(And yet) there are compelling reasons to assign zero 
   to this 'missing' term since it is strongly contradicted by the 
   experimental evidence. To wit, if there were an extra term it 
   could not simply be a constant but would be a function of space 
   and time. Then on substituting Bohm's psi, one would get an 
   additional term appearing in the quantum potential. However, 
   without this term the pattern of trajectories computed for 
   particles reproduces the intensity distribution in the double 
   slit experiment. The addition of any other term would ruin this 
   agreement with experimental data. Therefore this 'additional' 
   term is zero.  
   If I initially misunderstood Jack's position, herewith an apology."
Jack's response:  
  "The case that you make for the absence of a new term is correct
   for nonliving but not for living matter. 
   The whole point for living matter is that it violates the 
   statistical predictions of orthodox quantum mechanics. This idea 
   was first suggested by Brian Josephson and it is a feature of 
   Henry Stapp's model in Phys Rev A July 1994 p.18.  
   Again - the answer is that the Schrodinger equation works for DEAD 
   MATTER not for LIVE MATTER. Backaction is the essential signature 
   of LIFE - all forms.   
   The Schrodinger equation only works for isolated systems between  
   measurements (using Bohr's picture). Therefore, it is not applicable 
   to any living  system collective mode which is an open dissipative 
   structure. The Schrodinger equation works OK for low level reduced
   density matrices in living matter but NOT for high complexity
   collective modes.  
  
   The external pumping is essential - living systems continually 
   measure themselves. Nonunitarity is essential for life. The 
   backaction is the nonunitary mechanism."  
I think that Jack Sarfatti's original post attracted Stanley Jeffers' 
attention because Jack asserted that  
  "Bohm showed that... orthodox quantum mechanics depend upon the 
   approximation that there is a new kind of 'organic' or 'wholistic' 
   nonlocal and  context-dependent 'quantum force' that the wave 
   function exerts on matter."  
That *is* a funny expression! Doesn't Jack mean that Bohm showed that 
if one translates the orthodox interpretation's mathematics into the
quantum potential language (which was done precisely by Bohm, just as 
Stanley Jeffers said) then one can spot a formal characteristic of this 
"new kind" of potential: that it ignores feedback from movement of the 
sources? Physically one would not expect the feedback to be irrelevant.
One might then say that Bohm "showed" that the orthodox interpretation 
is based on an approximation. (If valid, such a discovery would be a
great accomplishment of Bohm's view!)  
There is much that i find valuable in the suggestion of back-action, 
though i am still wondering if it is really a well-defined idea which 
will prove useful in developing new physics...  
I read Henry Stapp's paper in Physical Review, curious to compare it
with Jack Sarfatti's ideas. Stapp's purposes are different. In this 
paper, "Theoretical model of a purported empirical violation of the 
predictions of quantum theory," Stapp describes a model which is like 
quantum mechanics in many respects, but which differs in its capacity
to accommodate certain causally anomalous phenomena (that have been 
claimed to have been empirically observed). He is thus giving a sort 
of "possibility proof" to show that certain kinds of nonlinear as well
as atemporal coupling between observer and physical system would not 
pose an insuperable challenge for physical theory. 
 
Stapp introduces a variation of a recent (1989) model of Weinberg's, 
in which the canonical equations are generalized leading to a theory 
similar to quantum mechanics but able to produce biased probabilities.
The anomalies he seeks to accommodate include subjects successfully 
influencing 'by intent' random events which had happened in the past 
and been recorded but never observed by humans.  
To deal with this, one seemingly needs a theory which is 1) non-
linear, 2) atemporal and 3) mind infused. The Weinberg model gives
#1. The rest Stapp handles by working explicitly in a von Neumann, 
Pauli, Heisenberg picture, where reduction of the wave packet "is 
physically associated with the mental process of the observer." 
This is very interesting:  
 "According to the interpretation of quantum theory adopted 
  here, the mechanical recording of the detection of products 
  of radioactive decay generates a separation of the physical 
  world into a collection of superposed 'channels' or 'branches':
  the physical world, as represented by the wave function of 
  the universe, divides into a superposition of channels, one
  for each of the possible recorded (but unobserved) results.
  Contrary to common sense the recorded but unobserved numbers
  remain in a state of superposed 'potentia,' to use the word
  of Heisenberg. Later when the human observer looks at the 
  device, the state of his brain will separate into a super-
  position of channels corresponding to the various alternative 
  macroscopic possibilities... Finally, when the *psychological*
  event of observation occurs, the state of the universe will 
  be reduced by a projection onto those brain states that are
  singled out by the conscious experience of the observer." 
With such a picture, the biasing of his model allows Stapp to give
a logically coherent model of his anomalies: the biasing happens
in the brain, based on the consciousness, and reaches out into the
world by entanglement.  
Consider how mind is embedded in Stapp's picture of the collapse of
the wavefunction, and that he very explicitly makes use of this to 
construct his model of a generalized relationship between observer
and world - in Bohm's picture where there is no collapse, how does 
one introduce mind into physics?  
How does Bohm's theory handle the situations for which a wavefunction 
reduction model has seemed useful? For example, Penrose and Hameroff 
have recently discussed "autoreduction" among networks of cytoskeletal 
microtubules and their components as a fundamental process underlying 
consciousness - is there a natural way to look at this in the Bohmian 
picture (back-reacting or otherwise)?  
Generally, why do we require and how can we find a place for mind in 
the Bohmian view? How does Bohm's theory differ in this respect from 
classical mechanics, for example? 
Stanley Jeffers told Jack Sarfatti that his professed dualism had 
more in common with Bohr's thought than with Bohm's. Jack disagreed, 
maintaining that Bohm was a dualist with two kinds of entities, ie.
material particles and guiding waves. 
Stanley replied that Jack was misusing the term "dualism."  
Jeffers:  
   If as Bohm asserts the objective wave function and the material  
   particle are both out there in the real world, where is the 
   dualism? 
   Herewit a quote from Bohm, (p106, Dialogues with Scientists and 
   Sages by Renee Weber, Routledge, Kegan and Paul, 1986) 
       "It has been commonly accepted, especially in the West, 
        that the mental and physical are quite different but 
        somehow are related but the theory of their relationship 
        has never been satisfactorily developed. I suggest that 
        they are not actually separated; that the mental and 
        physical are two aspects, like the form and content of 
        something which is only separable in thought, not in 
        reality."  
   There is no dualism here. 
Regardless, the technical questions about the physics of the brain, 
and of the mind, remain...
Rhett
Stapp, H.P., "Theoretical model of a purported empirical violation 
of the predictions of quantum theory," Physical Review A (1994) 
More detail about Jack Sarfatti's ideas can be found at: 
http://www.hia.com/hia/pcr/qmotion.html 
This posting is a follow-up to: 
  
  1. http://www.teleport.com/~rhett/quantum-d/posts/sarf_1-25-96.html 
  2. http://www.teleport.com/~rhett/quantum-d/posts/jeffers_1-28-96.html
  
  ...and a hitherto unpublished email correspondence.