AnssiH
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Excellent! I was about to give you that reference for the third time, which would have started to seem a bit oddPeterDonis said:(Note: You do give a reference to a Cramer paper a little further in your post. I'll take a look at it, but I'm already familiar with the basics of the TI from reading other things Cramer has written, so I doubt that paper will tell me anything I don't already know.)
By "follow my references" I simply meant that I had already given you exactly that same Cramer's paper as a reference by saying "there's a whole list of references in this Wikipedia page" - first of which was exactly that paper. Sorry if that was unclear (I appreciate you may have better things to do with your time than try to follow references through 2 links :) )
Anyhoo now that that's cleared out, the one particular point you wanted clarification on was whether or not "superposition" is a feature of quantum mechanics, or a feature of particular interpretations of QM - you seem to believe it is the former, and I made the claim it's the latter.
This thread is about the connection between SR and QM interpretations, and transactional interpretation operates in the static Minkowski spacetime via positing temporally two directional transactions, to produce Bell experiment correlations in that static spacetime structure. In other words, that acts as an explanation to those observables that are in Copenhagen viewed as "superposition" and "entanglement". Meaning, the concept of superposition doesn't appear in TI. Meaning, superposition is a feature of some interpretations. I'm surprised that you are familiar with TI but not familiar with its transaction mechanism. I realize there may not be exactly these same words used in his paper about this - which is why I said it requires some amount of understanding / thinking this thing through, to realize what I'm saying is true (possible distorted semantics aside). It is not an attack on you or anyone as a person - just a general statement of the circumstance (everyone need to think about these things in order to understand them - to believe something without understanding it is the exact anti-thesis of scientific philosophy
ps, I noticed few people expressed doubt emoticons to my post. Would love to know what parts about it - and it would be interesting to discuss those parts, whatever they might be. Yes, I can dig up published references to whatever it is you guys have doubts about! We are here to increase each other's understanding.
Best regards!
-Anssi