Do We Have Any Viable Solution to the Measurement Problem?
Emily Adlam

TL;DR
This paper examines the challenges of extending solutions to the quantum measurement problem into relativistic contexts, proposing that viable solutions likely involve non-microscopic or non-dynamical beables and remain an open research area.
Contribution
It analyzes the limitations of existing approaches and proposes three potential routes for developing a relativistically compatible, single-world realist solution to the measurement problem.
Findings
Unitary-only approaches face epistemic issues in relativistic quantum mechanics.
Observable reality may not supervene on microscopic beables.
Three promising routes involve emergent, non-microscopic, or non-dynamical beables.
Abstract
Wallace (2022) has recently argued that a number of popular approaches to the measurement problem can't be fully extended to relativistic quantum mechanics and quantum field theory; Wallace thus contends that as things currently stand, only the unitary-only approaches to the measurement problem are viable. However, the unitary-only approaches face serious epistemic problems which may threaten their viability as solutions, and thus we consider that it remains an urgent outstanding problem to find a viable solution to the measurement problem which can be extended to relativistic quantum mechanics. In this article we seek to understand in general terms what such a thing might look like. We argue that in order to avoid serious epistemic problems, the solution must be a single-world realist approach, and we further argue that any single-world realist approach which is able to reproduce the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Philosophy and History of Science · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
