
TL;DR
This paper explores whether the significance of information and observation in quantum theory can be understood from a Bohmian perspective, potentially revealing that information concepts naturally emerge in a universe described by Bohmian mechanics.
Contribution
It investigates the relationship between information-centric views of quantum theory and Bohmian mechanics, proposing that information's role may be naturally explained within a Bohmian framework.
Findings
Information's special role may emerge from Bohmian mechanics
Bohmian universe could inherently explain quantum information phenomena
The perspective bridges objective reality with information-based interpretations
Abstract
Many recent results suggest that quantum theory is about information, and that quantum theory is best understood as arising from principles concerning information and information processing. At the same time, by far the simplest version of quantum mechanics, Bohmian mechanics, is concerned, not with information but with the behavior of an objective microscopic reality given by particles and their positions. What I would like to do here is to examine whether, and to what extent, the importance of information, observation, and the like in quantum theory can be understood from a Bohmian perspective. I would like to explore the hypothesis that the idea that information plays a special role in physics naturally emerges in a Bohmian universe.
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