loom91 said:
In order to observe a state we must disturb it. Thus we have changed the state by our very act of observation and uncertainty creeps in. ...Does an explanation exist or is it taken as an unexplainable axiom? Molu
Molu, uncertainty has nothing to do with disturbances. To see this, we just have to remember that the quantum-mechanical probability algorithm is time-symmetric. It allows us to assign probabilities not only to the possible outcomes of future measurements (on the basis of actual outcomes of present measurements) but also to the possible outcomes of
past measurements (on the same basis). (In both cases we use the Born rule. We can even assign probabilities to the possible outcomes of present measurements on the basis of past
and future measurements if we use the Aharonov-Bergmann-Lebowitz rule instead.)
Suppose that a measurement at t
1 yields the value v
1 and a measurement at the later time t
2 yields the value v
2. If the measurements are of the repeatable kind and the Hamiltonian is 0, then according to the usual time-asymmetric
interpretation of the formalism, the observable measured possesses the value v
1 from t
1 to t
2, at which time its value changes to v
2. If this is a valid interpretation than so is the following: the observable measured possesses the value v
2 from t
1, at which time its value suddenly changes from v
1, till the time t
2. If the latter interpretation is harebrained, then so is the first. If there is no collapse backward in time, then there is no collapse forward in time. And if there is no collapse, the question of disturbance does not arise. Observables have values only if, when, and to the extent that they are measured.
If you want to say something half testable about the values of observables
between measurements, you can say it in terms of the probabilities of the possible outcomes of
unperformed measurements.