Quantum Mechanics Without the Collapse Postulate

Dissertation, Columbia University (1992)
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Abstract

Because of the measurement problem, the standard theory of quantum mechanics is at best incomplete and at worst logically inconsistent. Everett suggested that the measurement problem could be resolved by taking the linear dynamics to be a complete and accurate description of the time-evolution of every physical system. The purpose of this dissertation is to see what happens when one takes Everett's proposal seriously. This dissertation includes a discussion of the standard theory of quantum mechanics and its origins, the measurement problem, Everett's relative-state formulation, the many-worlds interpretation, Albert's bare theory and its suggestive properties, and Albert and Loewer's single-mind and many-minds theories. I will show how one might construct a theory that exploits the bare theory's suggestive properties without encountering its empirical problems

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Jeffrey Barrett
University of California, Irvine

Citations of this work

Quantum Mechanics and Ontological Commitment.Peter Lewis - 1993 - Kriterion - Journal of Philosophy 5 (1):3-6.

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