(clearly I haven't figured out this 'quote' thing yet...)
Sambuco said:
However, within the most common interpretation of classical electromagnetism, in addition to the above, it is assumed that there is something "real", the field, that transports the information from A to B. I think this second perspective is more in line with Bell's "local causality", which is strongly linked to the notion of realism. That's more in line with the term "real retrocausation" I was referring to.
Okay, lots to unpack here. First: the ontology itself, the part of it based in spacetime, is what Bell called the "local beables". Yes, in most retrocausal models there is a real ontology, some actual parameters associated with points or regions in spacetime. (For example, the fields in E&M, as you say.). So Retrocausal models are models of local beables. That's sort of a prerequistite for talking about most of this stuff.
Even if a given model has local beables, the model might not have local mediation, or ##\lambda##-mediation as some people call it. I am interested in models with local mediation (Adlam isn't so concerned about this.). The idea is if there's a cause at A, and an effect at B, it's reasonable to expect to also see effects stretching from A to B via some path in spacetime. But if you hold the middle region fixed, conditional on it being fixed you can't have any causal influences from one side to the other (unless there's some alternate path). That also happens in classical E&M, and it's the sort of retrocausal model that I'm interested in: models that are "locally mediated", as we put it in the title of our above-cited Rev. Mod. Phys. piece.
But where I'm going to push back is the idea that these beables in the middle are somehow "transporting information" from one place to another. That's not how it works in all-at-once or retrocausal models, and arguably not even how it works in E&M. The beables are there, and they would have been different if the inputs to the model were different, and they can be used to help explain the model outputs. But they shouldn't be viewed as some sort of physical conveyer of information, as if casual influences were dynamical objects. Causation is not a dynamical process that flows from one place to another. It is a set of counterfactual statements about how a model works -- if this were different, but that was the same, then this would happen instead of that. Many people think you can't even talk about causation in terms of a one-actual-universe situation, only in terms of possible universes. (I'm an exception, but getting into that topic is quite 'in the weeds'!)
So: real beables, yes. Real mediators in the middle, yes. Real "transportation of information", no. But that last one isn't causation, just a conflation between our causal and dynamical reasoning. Causal reasoning in retrocausal models is best done "all at once".
Sambuco said:
I find this very interesting. I don't quite understand why retrocausality (à la Pearl) couldn't be incorporated into a framework such as RQM (perhaps Adlam's RQM+CPL version would be better to avoid everything related to the perspectivalism of Rovelli's original version).
Maybe it can, but I'm highly skeptical. If retrocausal models end up being correct, the whole mathematical framework of QM will be seen as a mashup of actual and possible worlds, awkwardly updated only at the very last instant when a measurement is actually made. If that final measurement setting is important right from the start, at some hidden-variable level, why would we use a framework that was built to explicitly ignore it, without any hidden variables?
Thanks for the questions!