A Pragmatist Understanding of Quantum Mechanics
Richard Healey

TL;DR
This paper offers a pragmatist interpretation of quantum mechanics, emphasizing its application and informational role rather than depicting an objective physical reality.
Contribution
It proposes that quantum states and probabilities are normative tools for beliefs, not direct representations of physical entities, resolving traditional measurement problems.
Findings
Quantum mechanics provides objective probabilities for events, not elements of physical reality.
Measurement creates a context where the Born rule yields outcome probabilities.
Quantum states do not collapse; they are updated relative to accessible information.
Abstract
Applications of quantum mechanics have led to many successful predictions and explanations of puzzling phenomena, and we now apply quantum mechanics to gain, process, and communicate information in novel ways. We can understand quantum mechanics by understanding how we have applied it. We should not seek agreement on the nature of the world it represents, because this theory does not itself represent the physical world (though its applications do help us to represent it better). When applied to a quantum state, quantum mechanics yields probabiities for physical events: both state and probability are objective--not because they represent elements of phyiscal reality, but because each exerts norrmative authority over the beliefs of anyone who accepts quantum mechanics and applies it relative to a physical situation they may (but need not) occupy. These events may be described by…
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