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QUANTUM EQUILIBRIUM AND THE ORIGIN OF ABSOLUTE UNCERTAINTY

543

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47

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2015

Year

Abstract

Dedicated to the memory of J. S. Bell. Abstract. The quantum formalism is a \\measurement " formalism|a phenomenological formalism describing certain macroscopic regularities. We argue that it can be regarded, and best be understood, as arising from Bohmian mechanics, which is what emerges from Schrodinger's equation for a system of particles when we merely insist that \\particles " means particles. While distinctly non-Newtonian, Bohmian mechanics is a fully deterministic theory of particles in motion, a motion choreographed by the wave function. We nd that a Bohmian universe, though deterministic, evolves in such a manner that an appearance of randomness emerges, precisely as described by the quantum formalism and given, for example, by \\ = j j 2. " A crucial ingredient in our analysis of the origin of this randomness is the notion of the eective wave function of a subsystem, a notion of interest in its own right and of relevance to any discussion of quantum theory. When the quantum formalism is regarded as arising in this way, the paradoxes and perplexities so often associated with (nonrelativistic) quantum theory simply evaporate. KEY WORDS: Quantum randomness; quantum uncertainty; hidden variables; eective wave function; collapse of the wave function; the measurement problem; Bohm's causal inter-pretation of quantum theory; pilot wave; foundations of quantum mechanics. 1.

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