Morbert said:
There is no intelligible description of their behavior without the measurement device being plugged in.
Morbert said:
It is quite distinct from Bohmian mechanics. Bohmian mechanics posits (either ontologically or nomologically) a guiding wave, and markovian dynamics.
Its not the same as Bohmian mechanics but its not incompatible with it either.
Look at it this way. Under Bohmian mechanics, we could imagine a God's eye perspective of what is happening at any given time in physical space. Obviously, one time means one outcome so this isn't interesting without repeating the experiment. What would we see? We would see events with Born probability frequencies, right? But we wouldn't be able to predict them due to ignorance of the initial conditions. We have a random variable here, and so we can have a stochastic description of the Bohmian situation. If I didn't know the physical Bohmian laws or whatever of what is going on, there is nothing stopping me from just characterizing thay scenario in terms of a stochastic process due to my ignorance. Otherwise the Born probabilities wouldn't really make sense.
Its true, Bohmian mechanics has Markovian dynamics. But this changes if you put the measurement device in the Bohmian description, because the measurement device disturbs the trajectory statistics, allowing one to get non-Markovian (i.e. indivisible) multi-time correlations of QM.
https://scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?cluster=11957102981612580756&hl=en&as_sdt=0,5&as_vis=1
https://scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?cluster=18082693999119350419&hl=en&as_sdt=0,5&as_vis=1 (Neumaier)
https://scholar.google.co.uk/schola...5#d=gs_qabs&t=1754586959336&u=#p=uhh3Tzb4pBMJ
Similarly, Barandes description requires the measurement device to be part of the unistochastic process.
If we take the stochastic process of the Bohmian situation but make sure that we are only talking about this situation when the measurement device is included in the description at every time, it will be identical to the Barandes stochastic process in the sense of when we try to construct the markovian transition probabilities for multiple times we won't be able to do it. And in the Bohmain scenario this will be because the measurement device perturbs the Bohmian trajectories and prevents us doing this, explaining exactly what indivisibility really signifies - measurement disturbance and the preclusion of joint probability distributions over different times.
The question is: what exactly in Barandes' model prevents me from interpreting his stochastic process for the measured system in the way I have just characterized the Bohmian stochastic process?
Absolutely nothing.
What prevents us intepreting the stochastic process in some other eay?
Absolutely nothing.
Morbert said:
I don't agree with this at all
You do agree because what you said in this comment is exactly what I said. QM doesn't entail a specific physical interpretation which is exactly why many can be applied to it.
Morbert said:
The unistochastic formalism has a very natural interpretation:
The unistochastic formalism is just an alternate mathematical description of orthodox quantum theory without much else. It is just a direct description of the statistics of measurement. If orthodox mechanics has many different possible interpretations, so does this as I just elucidated.
if the formalism doesn't exclude other interpretations then what are we talking about? Its a formulation which Barandes has chosen to give a specific interpretation. But because he thinks his interpretation is implied by the formalism, because he is using the formalism to build an interpretation, his interpretation is as thin as the formalism and not hugely different from a minimalist statistical interpretation. The only difference is he says that there are definite configurations when not measured. I am not exagerrating when I say that is the only difference because the formalism that Barandes is using to guide his interpretation does not let him say anything else.
So there is Barandes the formalism which is not incompatible with Bohmian mechanics or anything else.
And there is Barandes the interpretation which doesn't really push the river. It might solve the measurement problem, but there is no detail about the underlying physical ontology that gives reason to take up this interpretation. There is nothing really here beyond postulating definite configurations; but no one is convinced by just postulation without deeper arguments, deeper explanation, and I am sure people have made similar postulations many times over the last 100 years. What convinces people is a substantive model of the underlying physical ontology and what it does even when it is not being measured, how the weird quantumness is achieved exactly.
My concerns here are not the semantics of whether Barandes has a proper interpretation here.
My concern is whether Barandes the interpretation is any good. Thats the only thing I am arguing about here with any real substance. I may say its not really an interpretation because imo its so thin that it might as well not be. It is directly taken from a formalism which is consistent with various interpretations because that formalism is just an alternative formulation of quantum theory which only really says as much as orthodox quantum theory does, so any interpretation based on that will be thin. Barandes the interpretation isn't a huge improvement on the statistical ensemble interpretation imo. The single major difference of definite configurations when unmeasured in this interpretation is not a huge improvement for me because nothing else is said about them.