reilly said:
In fact, the neural collapse occurs
In fact?? That's an awfully bold statement!
reilly said:
And, it seems to me, that since the collapse is real, that it is a great, Occam driven alternative interpretation of QM.
Except for the fact that it doesn't tell us
anything about the interpretational issues with QM.

It doesn't address questions such as:
::: Is nature fundamentally uncertain? Or are there variables hidden from us that determine things?
::: What physically happens to the physical system when a measurement occurs?
::: Does QM apply to the macroscopic world?
::: Is nature local?
::: Are we humans in superpositions of states?
You only address the last of these points, and I'm not even sure your interpretation answers it! Moreover, your interpretation
introduces new
unanswered questions, such as the consistency of neural collapse.
Reilly said:
Hurkyl says:
Well, there's a problem with this interpretation: it doesn't explain the consistency of observation.
What does?
Quantum mechanics does.
In formulations where the collapse is taken to be physical, it's trivially easy to derive consistency: if I measure something, the physical system itself collapses into a state consistent with that measurement. Future measurements will automatically be consistent with what I measured!
In MWI-style interpretations, consistency is almost as easy -- it's just a superposition of all the possible things that could happen in the previous approach.
I presume other interpetations, such as Bohmian, can also derive consistency, but I don't know much about those.
reilly said:
As Wigner wrote, why does human language, mathematics in particular, work at all?
I don't see how this is relevant.
reilly said:
A measurement, for me, is not a measurement until I know about it.
Well, then there's a problem. It is possible for measurements that you
don't know about to have an effect on what you see.
For example, in the basic two-slit experiment, there are places on the screen that the particle cannot strike.
But if we put a detector into the experiment that can tell through which slit the particle travels, then it suddenly becomes possible for your particle to strike the previously forbidden zones.
So whether or not you want to call it a measurement if you haven't seen the results, it is still important to consider what they do.