
Physics and the Basic
Principle of Visualization Magick
Introduction
For starters, I would like to say a few things about myself to set
the record straight. I have a Masters degree in Quantum Field
Theory, am working on my PhD in the same, and am a practicing, if
tyro, shaman. I have read in several places that the best way to
start in magick is to read read read read, and I have noticed
several articles using Physics to explain magickal arguments.
Unfortunately, many of these articles either do not explain the
Physics very well or are just plain wrong. I am not disrespecting
these people: after all, not everyone can be a Physicist! I thought
I would write a brief article to clear up a few issues on the nature
of probability in Physics as well as how probability might play a
role in magick.
The following article is essentially a short paper on the
Metaphysics behind what I call "visualization magick." I am not
going to footnote: all of the Physics arguments are well known and
documented and can be found in any introductory text on Quantum
Mechanics. As for my magickal arguments, well, they are as correct
as I can make them. Naturally, I accept responsibility for any
errors contained in this article.
The Nature of
Investigation
Most of the science done today is based on a problem solving
technique called the "Scientific Method." The Scientific Method is a
well-established way to start from the basic principles behind a
problem and develop an experimentally based explanation of a given
phenomenon. It has been used successfully for centuries. There is
one problem with this method, though: it can be very difficult to
incorporate any newly discovered facts that do not fit the structure
of the current scientific theory. This point has been raised
repeatedly when scientists try to discover the nature of ghosts,
ESP, etc.
I think it is natural to take the viewpoint that any axiomatic
structure, such as the sciences, can only explain certain types of
phenomena. Other systems, such as magick, can explain other
phenomena. It is interesting that these different axiomatic
structures can overlap: they can explain the same types of
phenomena, but they explain them in different ways. One might call
different axiomatic systems as "paradigms," or "representations."
Whatever you call them, it is important not to mix the different
systems, because the any term defined in one representation are not
likely to have the same meaning in another. For example, anyone
trying to explain a magickal phenomenon in terms of Physics needs to
be careful of how the word "energy" is used. Energy in magick will
not necessarily mean the same thing as it does in Physics.
(Incidentally, energy is not a well-defined concept in Physics!)
In the remainder of this article I am going to discuss the Physics
representation known as the Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum
Physics (CI) and, within that representation, provide an explain of
visualization magick.
Schrodinger's Cat
and Quantum Reality
When most people think of Physics, they think of equations, math,
and all sorts of difficult problems. In actuality, Physics is based
on very simple arguments and can often be put in the form of puzzles
that illustrate the basic principles. For instance, Classical
Physics can usually be put into the form of some little guy (or
person, for you extreme liberalists) firing a cannon over a ravine.
Classical Physics describes what we see and touch in everyday life.
We are familiar with it and it is the representation that makes the
most sense to us. Another representation, which is more basic, is
that of Quantum Reality. Classical Reality is fully contained within
Quantum Reality, but Quantum Reality contains more phenomena, much
of it things we do not see in day-to-day life. Not really accepting
Quantum Reality for what it is, Erwin Schrodinger devised a thought
experiment to show the odd nature of what Quantum Physics implies.
He was essentially trying to ridicule the interpretation of the
science he was helping to develop. The thought experiment is known
as "Schrodinger's Cat."
We start with building a switch device based on quantum principles.
We are going to take an atom of a radioactive material and place it
inside a detector. The detector sends a signal to a switch if the
atom decays. Now, all atoms decay eventually, and the amount of time
it takes for half the amount of a radioactive material to decay is
called the "half-life" of the material. So the chance our one atom
will decay in one half-life is 50%. Thus, after one half-life, our
switch has an equal chance of being "on" or "off." We now connect a
vial of the deadliest poison to the switch; if the switch is "off"
then the poison vial is closed, if the switch is "on" then the
poison vial is open and any creature in contact with the poison will
die instantly. Now place the quantum switch and vial of poison along
side a cat in a sealed box. The question is after one half-life has
elapsed, is the cat alive or is it dead?
Since there is a 50% chance that the atom has decayed in one
half-life, our "logical" answer must be that the cat has a 50%
chance of being alive or dead. No other answer in our (Classical
Reality) experience makes any sense. We cannot say with certainty if
the cat is either alive or dead.
However, we are asking a question that requires a specific answer.
Is the cat alive, or is it dead? Quantum Reality gives us a third,
and actually the only valid, answer to this problem. The cat is in a
mixed quantum state of both alive and dead as far as anyone outside
the sealed box is concerned. That is, the cat is only in a specific
state of alive or dead when someone called a "quantum observer"
looks inside the box to determine the state of the cat. This leads
us to all sorts of metaphysical problems about the cat as well as
the problem of what defines a quantum observer.
The Copenhagen
Interpretation of Quantum Reality
The Quantum Reality representation of the result of the
Schrodinger's cat experiment does not make any sense as far as
Classical Reality is concerned. Nevertheless, it has good basis in
Physics. Many of the top Physicists of the time (around the 1930's I
believe) met in Copenhagen to discuss Quantum Mechanics. Several
topics were on the board there and eventually a consensus was made
as to the nature of a quantum system: if a system is not measured it
exists in a superposition of all possible quantum states. When the
system is measured, it falls into one specific state. (For you
Physics buffs, this is the concept behind the Born interpretation of
the wave function.) This representation has become known as the
"Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Physics." (CI) According to
the CI, Schrodinger's cat is both alive and dead until someone opens
the box to look.
There is one other way to look at Quantum reality, but you pay a
severe price. The representation, called the "Many Worlds Theory,"
states that every time a quantum level decision is made, the
Universe splits into two or more copies, one for each outcome of the
decisions. The Many Worlds interpretation of Schrodinger's cat
states that the Universe splits into two copies: one with a dead cat
and the other with a live cat. When we open the box we find out
which Universe we are in. Personally, I find this representation to
be a bit ridiculous, but you may feel free to choose which one you
like the most. Both the Many Worlds and the CI make exactly the same
predictions and we cannot tell which one is correct (if either!).
The Double Slit
Experiment
The Schrodinger's Cat thought experiment does not really tell us
anything about the real world unless we can prove it. Obviously, we
are not going to learn anything from killing cats (and why would we
want to anyway?) so we need to turn to another experiment to give us
some facts. The Young's double slit experiment does just that and is
almost as simple as Schrodinger's Cat. First though we need to talk
about light.
When Sir Isaac Newton was doing his experimentation on light he
decided, based on his experiments on reflection, refraction, and the
sharpness of shadows, that light was made of little particles, which
he dubbed "corpuscles." (We now call corpuscles photons.) Later on,
interference experiments (such as the Young double slit) showed that
light was made of waves, not particles. Was the great Sir Isaac
wrong?? Not entirely. In the early 1900s, a man named DeBroglie
showed that electrons, which are "obviously" particles, could be
thought to have a wavelike character. Eventually scientists realized
that all subatomic particles have both wave and particle
properties...subatomic "particles" are neither particles nor waves,
but are something else which we have come to call by the badly
punned name of "wavicles." (If you are a John Gribbon fan, as I am,
then you may like to call subatomic particles "slivey toves.") When
we run an experiment that assumes light is a particle, light behaves
as if it were made of particles; when we run an experiment that
assumes light is a wave, light behaves as if it were a wave.
Young's double slit experiment assumes light is going to behave as a
wave. We start with a monochromatic (single colored) light source
and pass it through a slit so that we obtain a set of equally spaced
wave fronts. We pass these wave fronts through a wall that has two
tiny holes in it, equally spaced from the center point. Beyond the
wall is our "detector:" essentially a TV that records the wave
pattern striking the screen. A diagram of the double slit experiment
may be found in any introductory Physics text, just look under the
term "interference" in the index.
When we turn the light source on, we see a pattern of light and dark
areas on the TV screen. This is the expected result since light is a
wave and the two slits create an interference pattern: the peaks and
troughs of the wave cancel out in different regions on the TV
screen. This is entirely due to the fact of those two little holes
in the wall...if there was only one tiny hole in the wall then we
would only see one point of light on the TV screen and no
interference. The one hole experiment is more like treating light as
a particle rather than a wave, and we get no interference from it
since particles do not interfere with themselves.
Now let us play with the experiment a bit. We are going to presume
that light is made of particles and install detectors in both holes
in the wall to see which hole the photon goes through. What kind of
pattern do we get on the TV screen now? According to Classical
Reality it had better be an interference pattern again. Nope. We get
two little points of light on the TV screen. Why? Because we are
thinking of light as particles we detected the particles, so they
cannot interfere with each other. Let's play with this again. We are
going to take the original double slit experiment and this time put
the photon detector right in front of the light source and then we
are going to run the double slit experiment only letting one photon
through at a time. Obviously, we only get a point of light on the TV
screen each time a photon passes through. However, let us record
where each photon hits and run a bunch of single photons through the
experiment. What do we get on the TV screen? We might expect to see
two little points of light on the screen, but we do not. We now get
a full-fledged interference pattern! Remember, this is a composite
pattern made up of individual photons going through the experiment,
not a bunch of waves. This is truly weird.
There are only two ways to explain this last result, neither of them
comfortable. Consider a photon passing through hole #1 as a photon
in state 1 and a photon going through hole #2 as a photon in state
2. The only way we can get an interference pattern is if we have
something going through BOTH holes at the same time. This implies
that the photon is traveling through the double slit apparatus in
both states at the same time. Remember we are not trying to detect
which state the photon is in as it goes through the holes, so the CI
predicts that the photon is in both states, just as the results say
it must be. (We can make a similar argument for the Many Worlds case
as well). This is hard experimental evidence for the CI and has not
been contradicted in the last 70 years or so. Just the
opposite...other experiments have lent validity to the CI. (By the
way, this same experiment has been done with electrons and, I
believe, neutrons as well.)
The Extreme
Copenhagen Interpretation and Your Quantum Universe
What follows is my personal interpretation of the Physics mentioned
above.
Let us go back to Schrodinger's Cat since it is the simpler
experiment. We need to discuss what makes a quantum observer again,
because it is a tricky point. A quantum observer is some nebulous
thing that takes a measurement of a system. What is it that creates
the measurement process? Presumably, we have two systems to
consider: the first is the actual experiment that we want to
measure, and the second is the system that does the measuring.
Therefore, if we take the measurement process to its most basic
level, a measurement is the process by which the experimental system
"gives" information to the observer's system. This information
exchange is mediated by photons (or W, Z, gluons, etc. Basically any
boson you wish. That's another topic.) To make a long story short,
the observer gets information from the experiment by absorbing a
photon. This means that an electron can serve as a quantum observer
since a absorbing a photon will alter the electron's state. A
quantum observer does not actually need to have an intelligence to
function; it merely needs to respond to the experiment in some way.
So. Let us go back to Schrodinger's Cat. According to the scientist
running the experiment the cat is both alive and dead until the box
is opened. Say that he opens the box and knows the state of the cat.
Now look at the people in the next room who are waiting to hear from
the scientist in the room with the cat. According to them, the cat
is STILL in that odd alive and dead mixed state. We can go further
and state that the whole lab we ran the experiment in is in an
undetermined state since the scientist in the lab might take
different actions depending on the state of the cat. No one outside
the lab can possibly know what is going on in the lab. Now look at
the people in the next room beyond that, etc. What we have is a
nested set of "Schrodinger's Cats." Until the information is passed
between different rooms, the set of rooms inside exists in a mixed
state.
We can take this argument to an (I feel logical) extreme. Since the
individual particles in our bodies act as quantum observers the only
pertinent information we have about the state of the Universe at
large is what we perceive through our senses. Therefore, anything
that we do not perceive through our senses exists in a mixed state
similar to Schrodinger's alive/dead cat: nothing exists in a
definite state unless we are sensing it. This is what I call the
"Extreme Copenhagen Interpretation." (ECI) What this implies, then,
is that each of us exists in our own personal universes and
everything exterior to that universe exists in an undetermined state
until we sense it. Note: I am going to ignore the question of other
people existing...I will assume other people exist and our knowledge
of their reality comes from the "interference" of these multiple
universes. To give a quick example consider the question: "If a tree
falls in a forest and no one is around to see it fall, does it make
any noise?" The ECI states that since no one was around, the tree is
in a mixed state of existance/non-existance. Furthermore it has
fallen/not fallen, much less made any noise/silence. Since the tree
does not directly influence your universe, you cannot say anything
definite about it even existing, even though you may have seen the
tree an hour ago.
The Basic Principle
of Visualization Magick
The ECI tells us that what we sense is what is contained in our
universe. In order to do magick we need (at least) one more
principle. When we do visualization magick, we actually feel what it
is that we visualize. The ECI says that what we feel makes up our
reality. Combining these two statements, we have what I call the
"Basic Principle of Visualization Magick." What we visualize becomes
real in our universe. This principle can be demonstrated by a simple
spell, which I call an "empowering" spell. First, enter a light
meditative state. (This first step may also be achieved by casting a
circle.) Next visualize a blanket of white fire surrounding you,
starting at your feet and working its way up to encompass your whole
body. Hold this visualization until you can actually feel the fire
surrounding you, cleansing your spirit and not letting any darkness
penetrate your being. Now visualize your hands held outward from
your body and let a globe of white fire come into being between your
hands. Hold the globe there until you can feel it. This globe of
fire represents your inner strength and the longer you hold it the
more in touch with your strength you will be. The result of this
spell is that you will feel empowered and more able to cope with the
challenges of your life.
Is this magick, physics, or psychology? Remember, how we view our
universe depends on the representation we use. In this case, the
empowering spell may be viewed in any one of these representations.
Using the ECI to describe the spell what we are doing is literally
bringing up our inner strength as a concrete object and physically
contacting it. We know it is there because we can feel it, therefore
according to the ECI it has an actual existence. A similar argument
holds for essentially any magick that has its basis in visualization
or feelings.
The ECI explains how magick can affect our own universe, what about
someone else's? After all many witches (warlocks, sorcerers, etc.)
will claim that their magick affects other people, not just their
own universe. We can use visualization magick to show how this might
work, so there is not necessarily any conflict here. You
(presumably) put some clothes on today so anyone that sees you will
see those clothes and all of them will be able to describe the same
set of clothing. You know you are wearing a certain set of clothes,
and your best friend came up to you and mentioned something about
the outfit, so you know she saw them. Both of you agree on the set
of clothes because both of your universes came into contact, i.e.
the two universes interfere because they both contain quantum
observers. Now, can your best friend say anything about what you are
wearing three hours after you parted? No, because you might have
changed clothes. (Or Heck, you might be skinny-dipping in the local
watering hole!) Once the universes are out of contact they no longer
interfere.
To continue the analogy, if you feel something in your universe then
it is real in your universe and thus, because your universe
interferes with other universes the effect may well be real in
someone else's universe. Say you know a spell to create a rainstorm.
It will happen in your universe. Whether or not it happens in
someone else's universe depends on the strength of the interference
between your universe and theirs. I would suppose that the strength
of the interference depends on the strength of your belief (and that
of others) that you can make it rain. Taking things at face value, I
would say that it would take a tremendously powerful mage to create
an effect in someone else's universe seeing how difficult it is to
create a magickal effect in our own universe. Note: I am aware the
rain spell probably has nothing to do with visualization magick. I
am also aware that other magickal principles could come into play
here. Remember that I am using a representation, the ECI, to explain
an effect. The ECI is probably not a good representation to discuss
a rainmaking spell!
Summary
The way we explain an effect depends on the representation we use.
The rules for which a representation is a good representation to
explain an effect are not known, though we may certainly use common
sense to guide us. The CI is a well-established representation that
is used in modern day Physics. A logical extension to the CI is the
ECI, which states that we all live in our own individual universe
and that the Universe is composed of the interference of these
personal universes. The ECI provides a way for Physics to explain
the phenomenon of visualization magick by stating that what we feel
is what is real in our universe.
Physics and
the Basic Principle of Visualization Magick
by Dan
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