Complementary Observables and Non-Boolean Logic Outside Quantum Physics
Abstract
The concept of complementarity in combination with a non-Boolean calculus of propositions refers to a pivotal feature of quantum systems which has long been regarded as a key to their distinction from classical systems. But a non-Boolean logic of complementary features may also apply to classical systems, if their states and observables are defined by partitions of a classical state space. If these partitions do not satisfy certain stability criteria, complementary observables and non-Boolean propositional lattices may be the consequence. This is especially the case for non-generating partitions of nonlinear dynamical systems. We show how this can be understood in more detail and indicate some challenging consequences for systems outside quantum physics, including mental processes.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1510.03325,
title = {Complementary Observables and Non-Boolean Logic Outside Quantum Physics},
author = {Harald Atmanspacher and Peter beim Graben},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1510.03325},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
14 pages, 6 figures