The Reduction of the State Vector and Limitations on Measurement in the Quantum Mechanics of Closed Systems
James B. Hartle

TL;DR
This paper explores how quantum mechanics of closed systems modifies measurement concepts, focusing on state vector reduction, probability predictions, and limitations imposed by uncertainty principles, without relying on measurement as a fundamental notion.
Contribution
It analyzes the incorporation of measurement features into the quantum mechanics of closed systems and derives limitations on measurement records based on initial system purity.
Findings
State vector reduction is essential in closed system histories.
Uncertainty principles restrict possible alternative histories.
Impure initial states limit measurement record existence.
Abstract
Measurement is a fundamental notion in the usual approximate quantum mechanics of measured subsystems. Probabilities are predicted for the outcomes of measurements. State vectors evolve unitarily in between measurements and by reduction of the state vector at measurements. Probabilities are computed by summing the squares of amplitudes over alternatives which could have been measured but weren't. Measurements are limited by uncertainty principles and by other restrictions arising from the principles of quantum mechanics. This essay examines the extent to which those features of the quantum mechanics of measured subsystems that are explicitly tied to measurement situations are incorporated or modified in the more general quantum mechanics of closed systems in which measurement is not a fundamental notion. There, probabilities are predicted for decohering sets of alternative time…
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