An Epistemic View of Quantum Communication
Subhash Kak

TL;DR
This paper offers an epistemological perspective on quantum communication, emphasizing the role of observer choices and the epistemic nature of information, linking it to foundational principles like complementarity and the Copenhagen interpretation.
Contribution
It introduces an epistemic framework for understanding quantum communication, reconnecting it with historical philosophical principles such as psychophysical parallelism and complementarity.
Findings
Highlights the epistemic nature of information in quantum communication
Reinterprets the Copenhagen interpretation through an epistemic lens
Connects observer choices with fundamental quantum principles
Abstract
This paper presents an epistemological perspective on quantum communication between parties that highlights the choices that must be made in order to send and obtain information. The notion of information obtained in such a communication is a property associated with the observers and while dependent on the nature of the physical system its fundamental basis is epistemic. We argue that the observation process is in accord with the principle of psychophysical parallelism that was used by Bohr, von Neumann, Schrodinger and others to establish the philosophical basis of complementarity but has since fallen out of fashion. This principle gave coherence to the original Copenhagen Interpretation without which the latter has come to have some sort of an ad hoc character.
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications
