Notwithstanding Bohr, the Reasons for QBism
Christopher A. Fuchs

TL;DR
This paper clarifies that QBism is a distinct interpretation of quantum mechanics emphasizing subjective probabilities and personal experiences, contrasting it with Bohr's views and exploring philosophical implications.
Contribution
It explicitly delineates three core tenets of QBism, differentiating it from Bohr and analyzing its philosophical and interpretative implications.
Findings
QBism treats the Born Rule as a normative decision-making guideline.
All quantum probabilities are subjective and do not dictate nature's behavior.
Quantum measurement outcomes are personal experiences for the agent.
Abstract
Without Niels Bohr, QBism would be nothing. But QBism is not Bohr. This paper attempts to show that, despite a popular misconception, QBism is no minor tweak to Bohr's interpretation of quantum mechanics. It is something quite distinct. Along the way, we lay out three tenets of QBism in some detail: 1) The Born Rule---the foundation of what quantum theory means for QBism---is a normative statement. It is about the decision-making behavior any individual agent should strive for; it is not a descriptive "law of nature" in the usual sense. 2) All probabilities, including all quantum probabilities, are so subjective they never tell nature what to do. This includes probability-1 assignments. Quantum states thus have no "ontic hold" on the world. 3) Quantum measurement outcomes just are personal experiences for the agent gambling upon them. Particularly, quantum measurement outcomes are not,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Philosophy and History of Science · Biofield Effects and Biophysics
