Perpetual Student
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2008
- Messages
- 4,852
s. i.:
I believe the above summary of the three interpretations of QM is a bit biased.
It is also true that the Copenhagen interpretation requires accepting the concept of "superposition of states" a very non-intuitive, magical kind of reality.
Many worlds infinitely complicates reality if every collapse of the wave function results in an additional universe, which is magically undetectable and cannot be unambiguously demonstrated.
Bohm's approach is simply that the wave function "guides" the particle in a very intuitive and non-mysterious way. (i. e.: the wave goes though both slits but the particle goes through only one.) All the descriptions I have read (as a layman) seem to have no problem with SR, so I'm not convinced by that objection.
Non-locality (which seems to me to be preferable among these convoluted choices) is the price one pays for accepting a non-magical interpretation.
I believe the above summary of the three interpretations of QM is a bit biased.
It is also true that the Copenhagen interpretation requires accepting the concept of "superposition of states" a very non-intuitive, magical kind of reality.
Many worlds infinitely complicates reality if every collapse of the wave function results in an additional universe, which is magically undetectable and cannot be unambiguously demonstrated.
Bohm's approach is simply that the wave function "guides" the particle in a very intuitive and non-mysterious way. (i. e.: the wave goes though both slits but the particle goes through only one.) All the descriptions I have read (as a layman) seem to have no problem with SR, so I'm not convinced by that objection.
Non-locality (which seems to me to be preferable among these convoluted choices) is the price one pays for accepting a non-magical interpretation.