Recently, Roger Colbeck and Renato Renner (C&R) have claimed that ‘[n]o extension of quantum theory can have improved predictive power'. If correct, this is a spectacular impossibility theorem for hidden variable theories, which is more general than the theorems of Bell and Leggett. Also, C&R have used their claim in attempt to prove that a system's quantum-mechanical wave function is in a one-to-one correspondence with its ‘ontic' state. C&R's claim essentially means that in any hidden variable theory that is compatible with quantum-mechanical predictions, probabilities of measurement outcomes are independent of these hidden variables. This makes such variables otiose. On closer inspection, however, the generality and validity of the claim...
Contrary to classical physics, the predictions of quantum theory for measurement outcomes are of a p...
In a series of papers Colbeck and Renner (2011, 2015a,b) claim to have shown that the quantum state ...
According to quantum theory, measurements generate random outcomes, in stark contrast with classical...
Recently, Roger Colbeck and Renato Renner (C&R) have claimed that ‘[n]o extension of quantum theory ...
Bell's Theorem may well be the best known result in the foundations of quantum mechanics. Here it is...
We prove a no-go theorem for a class of hidden variables theories that satisfy parameter independenc...
In this thesis a recent claim by Roger Colbeck and Renato Renner is reviewed. This claim concerns th...
We clarify the meaning of Bell's theorem and its implications for the construction of hidden variabl...
The aim of this paper is to argue that the (alleged) indeterminism of quantum mechanics, claimed by ...
When statistical models are used in social sciences, there is no presumption that actual reality is ...
In the debate whether ‘hidden variables’ could exist underneath quantum probabilities, the ‘no hidde...
In a series of papers Colbeck and Renner (2011, 2015a,b) claim to have shown that the quantum state ...
Quantum states containing records of incompatible outcomes of quantum measurements are valid states ...
In a series of papers Colbeck and Renner claim to have shown that the quantum state provides a compl...
The admissibility of certain nonlocal hidden-variable theories are explained via information theory....
Contrary to classical physics, the predictions of quantum theory for measurement outcomes are of a p...
In a series of papers Colbeck and Renner (2011, 2015a,b) claim to have shown that the quantum state ...
According to quantum theory, measurements generate random outcomes, in stark contrast with classical...
Recently, Roger Colbeck and Renato Renner (C&R) have claimed that ‘[n]o extension of quantum theory ...
Bell's Theorem may well be the best known result in the foundations of quantum mechanics. Here it is...
We prove a no-go theorem for a class of hidden variables theories that satisfy parameter independenc...
In this thesis a recent claim by Roger Colbeck and Renato Renner is reviewed. This claim concerns th...
We clarify the meaning of Bell's theorem and its implications for the construction of hidden variabl...
The aim of this paper is to argue that the (alleged) indeterminism of quantum mechanics, claimed by ...
When statistical models are used in social sciences, there is no presumption that actual reality is ...
In the debate whether ‘hidden variables’ could exist underneath quantum probabilities, the ‘no hidde...
In a series of papers Colbeck and Renner (2011, 2015a,b) claim to have shown that the quantum state ...
Quantum states containing records of incompatible outcomes of quantum measurements are valid states ...
In a series of papers Colbeck and Renner claim to have shown that the quantum state provides a compl...
The admissibility of certain nonlocal hidden-variable theories are explained via information theory....
Contrary to classical physics, the predictions of quantum theory for measurement outcomes are of a p...
In a series of papers Colbeck and Renner (2011, 2015a,b) claim to have shown that the quantum state ...
According to quantum theory, measurements generate random outcomes, in stark contrast with classical...