Locally Causal and Deterministic Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics: Parallel Lives and Cosmic Inflation
Mordecai Waegell

TL;DR
This paper reviews and combines locally causal, deterministic interpretations of quantum mechanics, proposing models that avoid Bell's theorem constraints by using cosmic inflation and parallel lives concepts, with implications for realism and free will.
Contribution
It introduces a novel combined model of quantum interpretation that integrates cosmic inflation and parallel lives, maintaining local causality and determinism.
Findings
Models can be locally causal and deterministic
Quantum mechanics can produce locally consistent realities
Implications for free will and realism are discussed
Abstract
Several locally deterministic interpretations of quantum mechanics are presented and reviewed. The fundamental differences between these interpretations are made transparent by explicitly showing what information is carried locally by each physical system in an idealized experimental test of Bell's theorem. This also shows how each of these models can be locally causal and deterministic. First, a model is presented which avoids Bell's arguments through the assumption that space-time inflated from an initial singularity, which encapsulates the entire past light cone of every event in the universe. From this assumption, it is shown how quantum mechanics can produce locally consistent reality by choosing one of many possible futures at the time of the singularity. Secondly, we review and expand the Parallel Lives interpretation of Brassard and Raymond-Robichaud, which maintains local…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum Information and Cryptography
