JesseM
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Is there something wrong with "introducing nonlocality" in this context? All I'm claiming is that the rule of assuming unitary evolution, and then applying the Born rule/projection postulate at the very end to determine probabilities of different recorded outcomes, is a well-defined pragmatic procedure for generating theoretical predictions about experiments which can be compared with the actual results you find when the experiment is done in real life and the measurement results all written down somewhere. As always, it's just a pragmatic rule for generating predictions about the kinds of results we can write down, it's not meant to be a coherent description of what actually goes on physically at all moments.akhmeteli said:I don't know. Generally speaking, the projection postulate immediately introduces nonlocality.
Do you disagree that this is a well-defined procedure for generating predictions about the actual results seen in quantum experiments?
Again, I don't feel like spending a lot of time looking for a paper that specifically uses the von Neumann approach to derive theoretical predictions about EPR type experiments. But do you disagree that the procedure I'm using is the same one von Neumann was proposing? If you don't disagree, don't you think it's fairly implausible that this procedure would fail to predict Bell inequality violations, but no one would have noticed this before despite the procedure being known for decades?akhmeteli said:Right now I don't quite know how the procedure you describe is supposed to be used to prove the violations in quantum mechanics. Before I see the proof, I cannot tell you if there is any difference or not.
Also, now that you hopefully understand that I'm not talking about applying to projection postulate to each measurement but only once at the very end to all the records, you might reconsider the comment I made about one of the papers I linked to:
To put it another way, applying only unitary evolution to a series of N measurements and looking at the state S at the end means that, in the limit as N approaches infinity, S approaches "an eigenstate of reporting that their measurement results were randomly distributed and statistically correlated in just the way the standard theory predicts". So, this implies that if we apply unitary evolution to a series of N measurements and then apply the projection postulate/Born rule at the very end, then in the limit as N approaches infinity, the probability that "the measurement results were randomly distributed and statistically correlated in just the way the standard theory predicts" must approach 1. This isn't quite what I wanted to prove (that even for a small number of measurements, the von Neumann rule gives probabilities which violate Bell inequalities) but it's close.Also, note the paper http://www.lps.uci.edu/barrett/publications/SuggestiveProperties.pdf I linked to above, which shows that in the limit as the number of measurements (without collapse) in an EPR type experiment goes to infinity the state vector will approach "an eigenstate of reporting that their measurement results were randomly distributed and statistically correlated in just the way the standard theory predicts". This does at least imply that in the limit as the number of measurements goes to infinity, if we "collapse" the records at the very end, the probability that the records will show measurement results that were "randomly distributed and statistically correlated in just the way the standard theory predicts" should approach 1 in this limit. Do you disagree?
Who cares if it's incompatible when it's just a pragmatic rule for making predictions, not intended to be a coherent theoretical description of what's really going on at all times? The pragmatic rule says that you model the system as evolving in a unitary way until all the measurements are done, then at the end you apply the projection postulate/Born rule to get predictions about the statistics of measurement records. If you see this final application of the projection postulate/Born rule as a violation of unitary evolution, fine, the pragmatic rule says you apply unitary evolution up to the final time T, then at time T you discard unitary evolution and apply the projection postulate. That's a coherent pragmatic rule (nothing wrong with requiring different rules at different times, as long as you know which to use when) even if it makes little sense as a theoretical picture.akhmeteli said:Anyway, strictly speaking, the projection postulate is not compatible with unitary evolution, whether you use the postulate at the end, at the beginning, or in the middle.
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