Taken from the October 2017 issue of Physics World
Robert P Crease identifies a physics experiment that philosophers would dub “sublime”
“This chocolate chilli mango tiramisu is simply sublime!”
Fascinating, the contrast between the colloquial and technical meanings of terms. In everyday language, we apply the word “sublime” to things like clothes, music and food that are particularly awesome, deep or yummy. In physics and philosophy, however, the word has technical and precise meanings that stick closer to its etymology, which combines the Latin sub (close to or under) and limen (a threshold).
Physicists use sublime to indicate a phase transition from solid to gas that bypasses the liquid state and is triggered by an endothermic process just below the critical-point threshold. Philosophers, meanwhile, use the word to describe the agitation and disorientation you feel when confronted with something incomprehensible and overwhelming. Here, the threshold is between the limited human mind and the limitless, natural world.
For philosophers, then, the sublime is not synonymous with beautiful, and the two terms are in some ways opposites. While the beautiful is calming, integrates mind and nature, and is generated by the formal properties of the beautiful object, the sublime is arousing and formless.
So are there any instances in physics that can give rise to the philosophical experience of “sublime”? Last summer I attended a series of lectures given in Italy by Edward Casey – a colleague of mine at Stony Brook University – that convinced me that at least one experiment perfectly fits the bill.
Mind and nature
Philosophers have mulled over the sublime for centuries. In his 1756 treatise A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful, the Irish statesman and philosopher Edmund Burke wrote that terror is the “principle of the sublime”. Encountering overwhelming things such as hurricanes and volcanoes, for instance, disrupts our usual ways of coping with the world. But when such terror is placed at a safe distance – as in, say, a painting – we can feel its power without personal danger, producing a special kind of pleasure that makes us feel more vibrant and alive. It was this experience of fear-tinged pleasure that Burke dubbed “the sublime”.
In his Critique of Judgment (1790), the German philosopher Immanuel Kant analysed the concept somewhat differently, and described two kinds of sublime. One, the mathematical sublime, is inspired by experiences of things that are so vast and intricate (such as St Peter’s Basilica in Rome or the starry universe) that our imaginations cannot size them up by turning them into intuitions. Another, the dynamical sublime, consists of experiences of things of such stupifyingly overwhelming power (such as ocean storms) that we feel helpless to resist them.
Like Burke, Kant thought that when such disturbing encounters are put at a safe distance – as in art – they can generate a special kind of pleasure. Unlike Burke, Kant thought that the key to the sublime was the mental act of confronting something to which we realize our imaginations and power are utterly mismatched. Such an experience, Kant thought, reveals to us something liberating – the independence of our minds from nature – kindling in us a deep and humbling respect both for the implacable, law-governed natural world and for the freedom and transcendence that humans have with respect to it.
Casey’s lectures examined these two influential accounts of the sublime, as well as others, but gave the subject a twist. He is a philosophical “phenomenologist”, which means he is less interested in analysing concepts, such as the sublime, by taking for granted seemingly obvious analytic tools – especially those that come in neat pairs like mind/nature. The problem with these tools is that they often tempt us to squeeze an experience into conventional categories rather than to respect its nuances.
Instead, Casey began by trying to carefully describe the experience itself. That experience, he argues, reveals that the sublime is neither so much about a threatening object (as per Burke) nor about our special feelings in response (Kant). Instead, it is more like an aura that permeates an entire landscape, turning it into something we encounter differently from ordinary space and time. That encounter, he continues, can be inspired not only by terror, but also by other kinds of experiences of phenomena in which we perceive both nature and the way we perceive it as intimately knit together.
The critical point
Casey left me convinced that the double-slit experiment with electrons, which results in a visual pattern of spots indicating that these particles are spatially unpindownable, is an exemplary case of the sublime.
First, the experiment is (as per Burke) of a startling natural phenomenon; it reveals electrons behaving in extraordinary ways. Second, it shows (as per Kant) something that we cannot size up with our imagination and understanding even after almost a century of quantum mechanics. As Werner Heisenberg said, subatomic behaviour is unintuitable in ordinary space and time, while Niels Bohr remarked that those who are not shocked by quantum mechanics do not understand it. Finally, it is something (as per Casey) that we experience as not on one side or the other of the mind–nature threshold, but as the product of both. The double-slit experiment (and quantum mechanics, which provides its theoretical script), after all, is a human creation, even as it shows something shockingly indigestible to human imaginations and understanding.
There may be deeper illustrations of the non-classical character of quantum mechanics – the Stern–Gerlach experiment or demonstrations of the violation of Bell’s inequality – but the double-slit experiment is the most perceptually accessible and dramatic. As Richard Feynman remarked in his Lectures on Physics, it puts on clear display the mystery of quantum mechanics. Forget St Peter’s Basilica, hurricanes, volcanoes, hurricanes and tiramisu – if asked to name something truly sublime in the deep technical philosophical sense, I’d choose the double slit.
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As a seasoned enthusiast deeply immersed in the realms of both physics and philosophy, I find the intersection of these two disciplines to be particularly intriguing. The article you've referenced from the October 2017 issue of Physics World delves into the concept of the "sublime" and its manifestation in a physics experiment. Drawing upon my wealth of knowledge and experience in both fields, let me provide you with an insightful breakdown of the key concepts involved.
The article begins by highlighting the dual nature of the term "sublime" as it is used in everyday language and in technical contexts. In physics, "sublime" refers to a phase transition from solid to gas that bypasses the liquid state, triggered by an endothermic process just below the critical-point threshold. On the other hand, philosophers use the term to describe the disorientation and awe one feels when confronted with something incomprehensible and overwhelming, emphasizing the threshold between the limited human mind and the limitless natural world.
The discussion then delves into the historical perspectives on the sublime from philosophers such as Edmund Burke and Immanuel Kant. Burke, in his 1756 treatise, associated terror with the sublime, suggesting that encountering overwhelming phenomena disrupts our usual ways of coping with the world. Kant, in his Critique of Judgment, distinguished between the mathematical sublime, inspired by vast and intricate experiences, and the dynamical sublime, arising from encounters with overwhelmingly powerful phenomena.
Philosopher Edward Casey, a colleague at Stony Brook University, takes a phenomenological approach to the sublime. Instead of analyzing the concept through conventional pairs like mind/nature, he focuses on describing the experience itself. Casey argues that the sublime is like an aura permeating an entire landscape, transforming our encounter with it. This encounter can be inspired not only by terror but also by experiences where we perceive both nature and our perception of it as intimately connected.
The article then introduces the application of the sublime concept to a specific physics experiment – the double-slit experiment with electrons. Casey contends that this experiment, revealing the spatially unpindownable behavior of electrons, is an exemplary case of the sublime. The experiment is startling, displaying extraordinary behavior of electrons, and it aligns with Kant's idea of the sublime as something beyond the grasp of imagination and understanding, even after a century of quantum mechanics.
In conclusion, the article suggests that the double-slit experiment, with its capacity to evoke a sense of the sublime, stands out as a profound illustration of the non-classical character of quantum mechanics. While there may be deeper illustrations in quantum mechanics, the double-slit experiment, with its perceptual accessibility and dramatic impact, is presented as a compelling choice for something truly sublime in the deep technical and philosophical sense.