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Entanglement as the world-making relation: distance from entanglement

Rasmus Jaksland

2020Synthese47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Distance, it is often argued, is the only coherent and empirically adequate world-making relation that can glue together the elements of the world. This paper offers entanglement as an alternative world-making relation. Entanglement is interesting since it is consistent even with quantum gravity theories that do not feature space at the fundamental level. The paper thereby defends the metaphysical salience of such non-spatial theories. An account of distance (space) is the predominant problem of empirical adequacy facing entanglement as a world-making relation. A resolution of this obstacle utilizes insights from the Ryu–Takayanagi formula (a holographic relation between entanglement and spacetime) and Susskind and Maldacena’s related ER = EPR conjecture (a relation between bell pairs and wormholes). Together these indicate how distance can be recovered from entanglement and thus carves the way for entanglement fundamentalism.

Topics & Concepts

Quantum entanglementRelation (database)Theoretical physicsConjecturePhilosophy of scienceSquashed entanglementEpistemologyPhysicsQuantumQuantum mechanicsMathematicsPhilosophyPure mathematicsComputer scienceDatabaseQuantum Mechanics and ApplicationsNoncommutative and Quantum Gravity TheoriesBiofield Effects and Biophysics
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