For scientific realists, quantum mechanics is unsatisfactory because it suffers from the measurement problem. However, there are at least three promising solutions: the pilot-wave theory, the many-worlds theory, and the theory of spontaneous collapse. In this paper I argue that the measurement problem is a false problem for the realist: it was proposed as the last resort to convince the positivists that the theory is not empirically adequate. Instead realists should focus on preserving the reductive explanatory schema that had worked so well in physics before, which requires a theory to have a three-dimensional ontology. Incompleteness argument to this effect have been proposed in the 1920s, but effectively ignored due to the positivistic climate, other unscientific reasons, and theorems which claimed that this project was impossible. When realists re-examined quantum mechanics in the 1950s and later, they happened to focus on the measurement problem. In this paper I speculate on what would have happened if realists instead focused on finding a three-dimensional ontology to complete quantum theory. I show that most paradoxes, puzzles and mysteries connected with quantum mechanics would have never emerge, and that many of what are now considered possible ontological interpretations of the theory would have hardly been taken as viable options.

(2024). What if We Lived in the Best of All Possible (Quantum) Worlds? . Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10446/273290

What if We Lived in the Best of All Possible (Quantum) Worlds?

Allori, Valia
2024-01-01

Abstract

For scientific realists, quantum mechanics is unsatisfactory because it suffers from the measurement problem. However, there are at least three promising solutions: the pilot-wave theory, the many-worlds theory, and the theory of spontaneous collapse. In this paper I argue that the measurement problem is a false problem for the realist: it was proposed as the last resort to convince the positivists that the theory is not empirically adequate. Instead realists should focus on preserving the reductive explanatory schema that had worked so well in physics before, which requires a theory to have a three-dimensional ontology. Incompleteness argument to this effect have been proposed in the 1920s, but effectively ignored due to the positivistic climate, other unscientific reasons, and theorems which claimed that this project was impossible. When realists re-examined quantum mechanics in the 1950s and later, they happened to focus on the measurement problem. In this paper I speculate on what would have happened if realists instead focused on finding a three-dimensional ontology to complete quantum theory. I show that most paradoxes, puzzles and mysteries connected with quantum mechanics would have never emerge, and that many of what are now considered possible ontological interpretations of the theory would have hardly been taken as viable options.
2024
Allori, Valia
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10446/273290
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