sumosanta said:
I mean it's a simple thought experiment: perform the double slit exp. with a detector at one slit, inside an empty room, with only a camera looking at the photographic plate (so we can see whether the interference pattern is destroyed or not).
Now it seems obvious to me that we would see no interference pattern, even though we (the experimenters) have no information about what slit the particle went through. But then doesn't that solve the Schrodinger's Cat problem?
The issue is how "big" is the system you have in mind. You are right that if you separate the slits from the photons, or the cat from its environment, then the two situations are the same, and we would say "the cat is alive or dead we just don't know which," or "there is or is not an interference pattern there whether we look or not." But the problem with the cat paradox is you can also choose to look at the larger system, which includes the cat and everything it interacts with, and then ask if the uber-system has within it an alive or dead cat.
I would say the real message of quantum mechanics, which resolves that paradox, is that this kind of question simply does not make sense. If you want to know about the state of the cat, or even define the term "cat", you must separate the cat from its surroundings, performing what would be thought of as a projection onto the cat subspace (or more correctly, the subspace of all observations that you would treat as directly informative about the state of the cat). But when you do a projection, it's like looking at the shadow of the system-- you are not seeing the whole system any more. So if the shadow is a cat that is alive or dead and we just don't know which, the question remains, what is the actual state of the entire system?
According to quantum formalism, the entire system is
indeterminate about the state of the cat, because there is no cat there, there is just an entire system. So something about observing pieces of a system disrupts the "unitarity" of the full system, and that is what is happening when you observe the cat or the presence of a camera next to a slit-- since you are external to the system, you are disrupting the unitarity of that environment, and that is what allows you to make definite statements about whether or not detections will occur and wavefunctions will collapse.
Now when it gets really interesting is when you demand that you yourself be considered part of the system. Then the projection onto your subspace is what we call doing physics. This brings in the paradox of the "many worlds" interpretation-- if we claim that the physics we do is restricted to a subspace of that which physics is meant to be informative, then we must say we are ourselves just part of the full system, and we are not in fact observing entire systems only pieces of the "many worlds." Of course, others point to the paradox of even defining what physics is if it applies only to a subspace of that which physics is supposed to inform us about! It really gets down to whether we think physics is a tool used by humans, or humans are a tool used by physics. That is a philosophical question, so is the place where the cat paradox becomes an issue for philosophy rather than physics.