The universality assumption (“U”) that quantum wave states only evolve by linear or unitary dynamics has led to a variety of paradoxes in the foundations of physics. U is not directly supported by empirical evidence but is rather an inference from data obtained from microscopic systems. The inference of U conflicts with empirical observations of macroscopic systems, giving rise to the century-old measurement problem and subjecting the inference of U to a higher standard of proof, the burden of which lies with its proponents. This burden remains unmet because the intentional choice by scientists to perform interference experiments that only probe the microscopic realm disqualifies the resulting data from supporting an inference that wave ...
An experiment by Proietti et al purporting to instantiate the `Wigner's Friend' thought experiment i...
The idea that wave-function collapse is a physical process stems from a misunderstanding of probabil...
The many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is based on three key assumptions: (1) the compl...
The universality assumption (“U”) that quantum wave states only evolve by linear or unitary dynamics...
I show in this paper why the universality of quantum mechanics at all scales, which implies the poss...
In the first part of this two-part article (Aerts & Sassoli de Bianchi, 2014), we have intro-duc...
The notion of measurements is central for many debates in quantum mechanics. One critical point is w...
The Schrodinger's Cat and Wigner's Friend thought experiments, which logically follow from the unive...
A general argument is presented against relativistic, unitary, single-outcome quantum mechanics. Thi...
We reconsider a well known problem of quantum theory, i.e. the so called measurement (or macro-objec...
We argue that it is fundamentally impossible to recover information about quantum superpositions whe...
The production of events in quantum theory, that is, of outcomes to which a probability can be assoc...
In this paper, we discuss the importance of measurement in quantum mechanics and the so-called measu...
I present a very general and simple argument — based on the no-signalling theorem — showing that wit...
Early in the development of quantum theory Bohr introduced what came to be called the Copenhagen int...
An experiment by Proietti et al purporting to instantiate the `Wigner's Friend' thought experiment i...
The idea that wave-function collapse is a physical process stems from a misunderstanding of probabil...
The many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is based on three key assumptions: (1) the compl...
The universality assumption (“U”) that quantum wave states only evolve by linear or unitary dynamics...
I show in this paper why the universality of quantum mechanics at all scales, which implies the poss...
In the first part of this two-part article (Aerts & Sassoli de Bianchi, 2014), we have intro-duc...
The notion of measurements is central for many debates in quantum mechanics. One critical point is w...
The Schrodinger's Cat and Wigner's Friend thought experiments, which logically follow from the unive...
A general argument is presented against relativistic, unitary, single-outcome quantum mechanics. Thi...
We reconsider a well known problem of quantum theory, i.e. the so called measurement (or macro-objec...
We argue that it is fundamentally impossible to recover information about quantum superpositions whe...
The production of events in quantum theory, that is, of outcomes to which a probability can be assoc...
In this paper, we discuss the importance of measurement in quantum mechanics and the so-called measu...
I present a very general and simple argument — based on the no-signalling theorem — showing that wit...
Early in the development of quantum theory Bohr introduced what came to be called the Copenhagen int...
An experiment by Proietti et al purporting to instantiate the `Wigner's Friend' thought experiment i...
The idea that wave-function collapse is a physical process stems from a misunderstanding of probabil...
The many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is based on three key assumptions: (1) the compl...