PeterDonis
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Yes. Nobody is disputing that. But, as I've already pointed out, this fact has nothing to do with ensemble interpretations vs. interpreting the quantum state as describing individual systems.Ben vdP said:elementary particles are identical. The indistinguishability is a consequence of that.
Can you give a specific quote from Ballentine that supports this claim?Ben vdP said:It starts to look now that by interpreting a physical system as an ensemble the concept of identical particles
got incorporated into Ballentine.
Um, by using the same basic math of QM that deals with it? That's how QM models indistinguishability of identical particles: by how wave functions for systems consisting of multiple identical/indistinguishable particles are constructed. What those wave functions represent according to a specific interpretation--whether they represent an ensemble or an individual quantum system--does not change how the wave functions are constructed at all. So there is no need for different interpretations to "reckon with" indistinguishability separately. It's already reckoned with in the basic math of QM that all interpretations use.Ben vdP said:This concept may be missing in other interpretations. Or how do other interpretations reckon with the concept of identical particles?
Rephrasing the question doesn't help any. The response is still the same. See above.Ben vdP said:The original question could even be rephrased that way.