
TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that a clear, falsifiable notion of causality is inherent in quantum theory, independent of classical determinism, and argues that causality naturally defines an arrow of time, challenging block universe and past hypothesis views.
Contribution
It establishes causality as a fundamental, theory-independent concept in quantum physics, separate from determinism, and links it to the arrow of time, refuting certain philosophical interpretations.
Findings
Causality is a theorem and falsifiable in quantum theory.
Classical causality is a special case of quantum causality.
Causality conflicts with the block universe and past hypothesis.
Abstract
Causality never gained the status of a "law" or "principle" in physics. Some recent literature even popularized the false idea that causality is a notion that should be banned from theory. Such misconception relies on an alleged universality of reversibility of laws of physics, based either on determinism of classical theory, or on the multiverse interpretation of quantum theory, in both cases motivated by mere interpretational requirements for realism of the theory. Here, I will show that a properly defined unambiguous notion of causality is a theorem of quantum theory, which is also a falsifiable proposition of the theory. Such causality notion appeared in the literature within the framework of operational probabilistic theories. It is a genuinely theoretical notion, corresponding to establish a definite partial order among events, in the same way as we do by using the future causal…
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