Well, the subject under discussion in this thread is "what makes Schrödinger's cat quantum", and I was just arguing along the lines of my first reply, i.e. from the point of view that there doesn't exist such a thing as a "classical world" to begin with. The world is fundamentally quantum mechanical and any classical physics can only arise as an approximation in the "classical limit".This view may be controversial, but the whole point of the "Schrödinger cat" thought experiment, is to expose potential difficulties with this view, namely that the superpositions do not really go away for macroscopic systems.I.m.o., the way to make experimental progress is to do experiments designed to measure violations of unitary time evolution like in the proposed expriment using a small mirror in a superposition.How can it be reasonable to demand that to verify a theory one has to demostrate the non classical features of a system for which the theory itself implies that such effects cannot be detected for all practical purposes?
You were the one who brought up coin throws and stated that they were classical. You presumably meant that to be in an effective instrumental sense, but that's surely not in the spirit of this threat, because the same could be said of Schrödinger's cat itself.