The Unfinished Search for Wave-Particle and Classical-Quantum Harmony
Partha Ghose

TL;DR
This paper reviews efforts to unify wave-particle and classical-quantum concepts, highlighting theories like KvNS that bridge classical and quantum physics, and discusses how entanglement signals non-separability rather than quantumness.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive review of classical-quantum unification theories, emphasizing the role of KvNS and its extensions in understanding entanglement and measurement.
Findings
KvNS theory provides classical wave-particle harmony.
Entanglement and Bell violations indicate non-separability, not quantumness.
Extensions to classical electrodynamics explain observed polarization entanglement.
Abstract
The main purpose of this paper is to review the progress that has taken place so far in the search for a single unifying principle that harmonizes (i) the wave and particle natures of matter and radiation, both at the quantum and the classical levels, on the one hand and (ii) the classical and quantum theories of matter and radiation on the other hand. The famous paradoxes of quantum theory, the mysterious nature of measurements in quantum theory and the principal no-go theorems for hidden variables are first briefly reviewed. The Koopman-von Neumann Hilbert space theory based on complex wave functions underlying particle trajectories in classical phase space, is an important step forward in that direction. It provides a clear and beautiful harmony of classical waves and particles. Sudarshan has given an alternative but equivalent formulation that shows that classical mechanics can be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Biofield Effects and Biophysics
