The meaning of the wave function. In search of the ontology of quantum mechanics
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2965462
Physics (00A79) PDEs in connection with quantum mechanics (35Q40) Research exposition (monographs, survey articles) pertaining to quantum theory (81-02) Quantum measurement theory, state operations, state preparations (81P15) Closed and approximate solutions to the Schrödinger, Dirac, Klein-Gordon and other equations of quantum mechanics (81Q05)
Abstract: The meaning of the wave function has been a hot topic of debate since the early days of quantum mechanics. Recent years have witnessed a growing interest in this long-standing question. Is the wave function ontic, directly representing a state of reality, or epistemic, merely representing a state of (incomplete) knowledge, or something else? If the wave function is not ontic, then what, if any, is the underlying state of reality? If the wave function is indeed ontic, then exactly what physical state does it represent? In this book, I aim to make sense of the wave function in quantum mechanics and find the ontological content of the theory. The book can be divided into three parts. The first part addresses the question of the nature of the wave function (Chapters 1-5). After giving a comprehensive and critical review of the competing views of the wave function, I present a new argument for the ontic view in terms of protective measurements. In addition, I also analyze the origin of the wave function by deriving the free Schroedinger equation. The second part analyzes the ontological meaning of the wave function (Chapters 6, 7). I propose a new ontological interpretation of the wave function in terms of random discontinuous motion of particles, and give two main arguments supporting this interpretation. The third part investigates whether the suggested quantum ontology is complete in accounting for our definite experience and whether it needs to be revised in the relativistic domain (Chapters 8, 9).
Recommendations
Cited in
(24)- Understanding time reversal in quantum mechanics: a new derivation
- Can pragmatist quantum realism explain protective measurements?
- A puzzle for the field ontologists
- On the classification between \(\psi \)-ontic and \(\psi \)-epistemic ontological models
- Is the statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics \(\psi\)-ontic or \(\psi\)-epistemic?
- Connecting the dots: Mott for emulsions, collapse models, colored noise, frame dependence of measurements, evasion of the ``Free Will Theorem
- Self-adjoint time operator of a quantum field
- Can the ontology of Bohmian mechanics consists only in particles? The PBR theorem says no
- Electron charge density: a clue from quantum chemistry for quantum foundations
- Status of the wave function of quantum mechanics, or, what is quantum mechanics trying to tell us?
- Why scientific realists should reject the second dogma of quantum mechanics
- Collapse of the wave function. Models, ontology, origin, and implications
- On Bell's Everett (?) Theory
- Do wave functions jump? Perspectives of the work of GianCarlo Ghirardi
- A No-Go result for QBism
- The wave function as matter density: ontological assumptions and experimental consequences
- Wave-functionalism
- A New Argument for the Nomological Interpretation of the Wave Function: The Galilean Group and the Classical Limit of Nonrelativistic Quantum Mechanics
- Photonic mode in a space-time with a causal loop: comparison of D-CTC and S-CTC models
- Review of Roland Omnés, The interpretation of quantum mechanics.
- Temporal Vibrations in a Quantized Field
- The wave function. Essays on the metaphysics of quantum mechanics
- On the wave nature of matter. A new approach to reconciling quantum mechanics and relativity
- Energy non-conservation in quantum mechanics
This page was built for publication: The meaning of the wave function. In search of the ontology of quantum mechanics
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q2965462)