Quantum Randomness and Underdetermination
Jeffrey A. Barrett, Simon M. Huttegger
Abstract
We consider the nature of quantum randomness and how one might have empirical evidence for it. We will see why, depending on one’s computational resources, it may be impossible to determine whether a particular notion of randomness properly characterizes one’s empirical data. Indeed, we will see why even an ideal observer under ideal epistemic conditions may never have any empirical evidence whatsoever for believing that the results of one’s quantum-mechanical experiments are randomly determined. This illustrates a radical sort of empirical underdetermination faced by fundamentally stochastic theories like quantum mechanics.
Topics & Concepts
UnderdeterminationRandomnessEpistemologyIdeal (ethics)Observer (physics)QuantumEmpirical evidencesortPhilosophy of scienceTheoretical physicsMathematical economicsComputer sciencePhilosophyMathematicsQuantum mechanicsPhysicsStatisticsInformation retrievalComputability, Logic, AI AlgorithmsQuantum Mechanics and ApplicationsEpistemology, Ethics, and Metaphysics