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On the Plurality of Quantum Theories: Quantum Theory as a Framework, and its Implications for the Quantum Measurement Problem

David Wallace

2020Oxford University Press eBooks73 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

‘Quantum theory’ is not a single physical theory but a framework in which many different concrete theories fit. As such, a solution to the quantum measurement problem ought to provide a recipe to interpret each such concrete theory, in a mutually consistent way. But with the exception of the Everett interpretation, the main extant solutions either try to make sense of the abstract framework as if it were concrete, or else interpret one particular quantum theory under the fiction that it is fundamental and exact. In either case, these approaches are unable to help themselves to the very theory-laden, level-relative ways in which quantum theory makes contact with experiment in mainstream physics, and so are committed to major revisionary projects which have not been carried out even in outline. As such, only the Everett interpretation is currently suited to make sense of quantum physics as it is found.

Topics & Concepts

Minority interpretations of quantum mechanicsTheoretical physicsInterpretation (philosophy)Extant taxonMainstreamMeasurement problemQuantumInterpretations of quantum mechanicsQuantum processMathematicsEpistemologyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsComputer sciencePhilosophyQuantum dynamicsEvolutionary biologyBiologyProgramming languageTheologyQuantum Mechanics and ApplicationsPhilosophy and History of ScienceAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
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