Rolliet said:
Is quantum physics closer to the truth than classical physics, or is it just a different way of looking at the same problem?
People based in classical physics believe that physical phenomena happen and can be faithfully captured as events in space and time and the endeavour of physics is to study mathematical models of these phenomena and explain what is going on in the world. Things such as observation, measurement of these phenomena play no fundamental role in the theory of the phenomenon, since it is assumed that these are merely intrusions of people to get information and the phenomena themselves are occurring elsewhere even without these intrusions. For example, theory of orbital motions is based in classical physics and gives position of a satellite such as Moon or spaceship as a function of time. This function obeys fixed set of equations. Any influence of observation or measurement of the satellites is usually ignored since it is negligible. It could be taken into account according to the theory, but it would complicate the theory immensely.
People based in quantum physics believe that the best description and explanation of physical phenomena anyone can do is via ##\psi## function or density matrix. This function / matrix is an abstract mathematical device without immediate intuitive connection to what we can observe with our senses and is unlike the above function of time. What is it good for? Shortly, in quantum physics one does not calculate what happens in the model of the phenomenon to understand the phenomenon. Instead, for given physical quantity (positions, energy,...), one computes from ##\psi## probabilities that chosen values will be obtained as a result of
measurement in future. So instead of modelling phenomena and developing explanations, we aspire for predictions of future. Abstracted concept of measurement and probabilistic fundamentalism play great roles in the quantum theory. For example, in Stern-Gerlach experiment, where silver atoms are passed through magnet and are subsequently captured on the screen placed in path of the stream, only probabilities for two preferred landing zones can be calculated. The atom lands in one of the two patches, but which one it will be cannot be found from the formalism of quantum physics. It could only be found from the formalism of classical physics, but I do not think we have achieved such classical model yet.
Historically, classical physics has been useful in the study of everyday macroscopic phenomena and phenomena on a large scale such as Earth, solar system, galaxy. There were always some phenomena that lacked satisfying explanation in terms of classical physics, like perturbations in the motion of the Moon and Mercury, or complicated behaviour of tides, but often good explanation was finally found. Only in 20th century the idea that the classical aspirations may not be legitimate on the scale of atoms took wind. What if atoms are not comprehensible with classical physics? Thus quantum physics developed, but it did not replace classical physics; it denounced its aspirations. Since this is not very useful in areas where classical physics has been succesfull, the quantum physics applications tend to concentrate in areas where there is no successful classical model yet.
So, to get back to your question, quantum physics is not that much a different way of looking at the same problem as it is a very different view on what are objectives of physics and what work is physicist supposed to do.