The Existence and Role of Quantum-State Noise
Aleksandar Perisic

TL;DR
This paper explores the idea that quantum states are not strictly definite and argues that the quantum world is active, influencing reality beyond fixed statistical outcomes, challenging traditional interpretations.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of quantum-state noise, proposing that quantum reality involves active, non-definite states influencing observed outcomes.
Findings
Quantum states are not strictly definite.
The quantum world actively influences reality.
Perceived outcomes are not permanently fixed.
Abstract
The key observation about quantum reality is that it often appears as if, at some moment, the probability of a quantum event becomes a definite outcome for us. A careful analysis suggests, however, that what we perceive as a definite state -- the observed outcome of a quantum experiment -- is not strictly definite. From this, we conclude that the quantum world is active: its influence extends beyond a merely statistical and permanently fixed determination of reality as we experience it.
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