Why interference phenomena do not capture the essence of quantum theory
Lorenzo Catani, Matthew Leifer, David Schmid, Robert W. Spekkens

TL;DR
This paper presents a classical statistical field theory that reproduces quantum interference phenomena without requiring radical interpretational claims, challenging the idea that interference phenomena inherently imply nonlocality or observer-dependent reality.
Contribution
It introduces a classical discrete field model that mimics quantum interference, providing an alternative explanation that avoids radical interpretational conclusions.
Findings
Reproduces interference experiments like Elitzur-Vaidman, Wheeler's delayed-choice, and quantum eraser.
Explains phenomena without nonlocal or backwards-in-time influences.
Shows that interference phenomena do not necessitate radical interpretational claims.
Abstract
Quantum interference phenomena are widely viewed as posing a challenge to the classical worldview. Feynman even went so far as to proclaim that they are the only mystery and the basic peculiarity of quantum mechanics. Many have also argued that basic interference phenomena force us to accept a number of radical interpretational conclusions, including: that a photon is neither a particle nor a wave but rather a Jekyll-and-Hyde sort of entity that toggles between the two possibilities, that reality is observer-dependent, and that systems either do not have properties prior to measurements or else have properties that are subject to nonlocal or backwards-in-time causal influences. In this work, we show that such conclusions are not, in fact, forced on us by basic interference phenomena. We do so by describing an alternative to quantum theory, a statistical theory of a classical discrete…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Philosophy and History of Science
