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Copenhagen interpretation

The Copenhagen interpretation is a collection of views about the meaning of quantum mechanics, principally attributed to Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg.[1] It is one of the oldest of numerous proposed interpretations of quantum mechanics, as features of it date to the development of quantum mechanics during 1925–1927, and it remains one of the most commonly taught.[2]

There is no definitive historical statement of what the Copenhagen interpretation is. There are some fundamental agreements and disagreements between the views of Bohr and Heisenberg.[3][4] For example, Heisenberg emphasized a sharp "cut" between the observer (or the instrument) and the system being observed,[5]: 133  while Bohr offered an interpretation that is independent of a subjective observer or measurement or collapse, which relies on an "irreversible" or effectively irreversible process, which could take place within the quantum system.[6]

Features common to Copenhagen-type interpretations include the idea that quantum mechanics is intrinsically indeterministic, with probabilities calculated using the Born rule, and the principle of complementarity, which states that objects have certain pairs of complementary properties that cannot all be observed or measured simultaneously.[7] Moreover, the act of "observing" or "measuring" an object is irreversible, and no truth can be attributed to an object, except according to the results of its measurement. Copenhagen-type interpretations hold that quantum descriptions are objective, in that they are independent of physicists' mental arbitrariness.[8]: 85–90 

Over the years, there have been many objections to aspects of Copenhagen-type interpretations, including the discontinuous and stochastic nature of the "observation" or "measurement" process, the apparent subjectivity of requiring an observer, the difficulty of defining what might count as a measuring device, and the seeming reliance upon classical physics in describing such devices.

Background

Starting in 1900, investigations into atomic and subatomic phenomena forced a revision to the basic concepts of classical physics. However, it was not until a quarter-century had elapsed that the revision reached the status of a coherent theory. During the intervening period, now known as the time of the "old quantum theory", physicists worked with approximations and heuristic corrections to classical physics. Notable results from this period include Max Planck's calculation of the blackbody radiation spectrum, Albert Einstein's explanation of the photoelectric effect, Einstein and Peter Debye's work on the specific heat of solids, Niels Bohr and Hendrika Johanna van Leeuwen's proof that classical physics cannot account for diamagnetism, Bohr's model of the hydrogen atom and Arnold Sommerfeld's extension of the Bohr model to include relativistic effects. From 1922 through 1925, this method of heuristic corrections encountered increasing difficulties; for example, the Bohr–Sommerfeld model could not be extended from hydrogen to the next simplest case, the helium atom.[9]

The transition from the old quantum theory to full-fledged quantum physics began in 1925, when Werner Heisenberg presented a treatment of electron behavior based on discussing only "observable" quantities, meaning to Heisenberg the frequencies of light that atoms absorbed and emitted.[10] Max Born then realized that in Heisenberg's theory, the classical variables of position and momentum would instead be represented by matrices, mathematical objects that can be multiplied together like numbers with the crucial difference that the order of multiplication matters. Erwin Schrödinger presented an equation that treated the electron as a wave, and Born discovered that the way to successfully interpret the wave function that appeared in the Schrödinger equation was as a tool for calculating probabilities.[11]

Quantum mechanics cannot easily be reconciled with everyday language and observation, and has often seemed counter-intuitive to physicists, including its inventors.[note 1] The ideas grouped together as the Copenhagen interpretation suggest a way to think about how the mathematics of quantum theory relates to physical reality.

Origin and use of the term

 
The Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen

The term refers to the city of Copenhagen in Denmark, and was apparently coined during the 1950s.[12] Earlier, during the mid-1920s, Heisenberg had been an assistant to Bohr at his institute in Copenhagen, where they helped originate quantum mechanical theory.[13][14] At the 1927 Solvay Conference, a dual talk by Max Born and Heisenberg declared "we consider quantum mechanics to be a closed theory, whose fundamental physical and mathematical assumptions are no longer susceptible of any modification."[15][16] In 1929, Heisenberg gave a series of invited lectures at the University of Chicago explaining the new field of quantum mechanics. The lectures then served as the basis for his textbook, The Physical Principles of the Quantum Theory, published in 1930.[17] In the book's preface, Heisenberg wrote:

On the whole, the book contains nothing that is not to be found in previous publications, particularly in the investigations of Bohr. The purpose of the book seems to me to be fulfilled if it contributes somewhat to the diffusion of that 'Kopenhagener Geist der Quantentheorie' [Copenhagen spirit of quantum theory] if I may so express myself, which has directed the entire development of modern atomic physics.

The term 'Copenhagen interpretation' suggests something more than just a spirit, such as some definite set of rules for interpreting the mathematical formalism of quantum mechanics, presumably dating back to the 1920s.[18] However, no such text exists, and the writings of Bohr and Heisenberg contradict each other on several important issues.[4] It appears that the particular term, with its more definite sense, was coined by Heisenberg around 1955,[12] while criticizing alternative "interpretations" (e.g., David Bohm's[19]) that had been developed.[20][21] Lectures with the titles 'The Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Theory' and 'Criticisms and Counterproposals to the Copenhagen Interpretation', that Heisenberg delivered in 1955, are reprinted in the collection Physics and Philosophy.[22] Before the book was released for sale, Heisenberg privately expressed regret for having used the term, due to its suggestion of the existence of other interpretations, that he considered to be "nonsense".[23] In a 1960 review of Heisenberg's book, Bohr's close collaborator Léon Rosenfeld called the term an "ambiguous expression" and suggested it be discarded.[24] However, this did not come to pass, and the term entered widespread use.[12][21]

Principles

There is no uniquely definitive statement of the Copenhagen interpretation.[4][25][26][27] The term encompasses the views developed by a number of scientists and philosophers during the second quarter of the 20th century.[28] This lack of a single, authoritative source that establishes the Copenhagen interpretation is one difficulty with discussing it; another complication is that the philosophical background familiar to Einstein, Bohr, Heisenberg, and contemporaries is much less so to physicists and even philosophers of physics in more recent times.[9] Bohr and Heisenberg never totally agreed on how to understand the mathematical formalism of quantum mechanics,[29] and Bohr distanced himself from what he considered Heisenberg's more subjective interpretation.[3] Bohr offered an interpretation that is independent of a subjective observer, or measurement, or collapse; instead, an "irreversible" or effectively irreversible process causes the decay of quantum coherence which imparts the classical behavior of "observation" or "measurement".[6][30][31][32]

Different commentators and researchers have associated various ideas with the term.[16] Asher Peres remarked that very different, sometimes opposite, views are presented as "the Copenhagen interpretation" by different authors.[note 2] N. David Mermin coined the phrase "Shut up and calculate!" to summarize Copenhagen-type views, a saying often misattributed to Richard Feynman and which Mermin later found insufficiently nuanced.[34][35] Mermin described the Copenhagen interpretation as coming in different "versions", "varieties", or "flavors".[36]

Some basic principles generally accepted as part of the interpretation include the following:[3]

  1. Quantum mechanics is intrinsically indeterministic.
  2. The correspondence principle: in the appropriate limit, quantum theory comes to resemble classical physics and reproduces the classical predictions.
  3. The Born rule: the wave function of a system yields probabilities for the outcomes of measurements upon that system.
  4. Complementarity: certain properties cannot be jointly defined for the same system at the same time. In order to talk about a specific property of a system, that system must be considered within the context of a specific laboratory arrangement. Observable quantities corresponding to mutually exclusive laboratory arrangements cannot be predicted together, but considering multiple such mutually exclusive experiments is necessary to characterize a system.

Hans Primas and Roland Omnès give a more detailed breakdown that, in addition to the above, includes the following:[8]: 85 

  1. Quantum physics applies to individual objects. The probabilities computed by the Born rule do not require an ensemble or collection of "identically prepared" systems to understand.
  2. The results provided by measuring devices are essentially classical, and should be described in ordinary language. This was particularly emphasized by Bohr, and was accepted by Heisenberg.[note 3]
  3. Per the above point, the device used to observe a system must be described in classical language, while the system under observation is treated in quantum terms. This is a particularly subtle issue for which Bohr and Heisenberg came to differing conclusions. According to Heisenberg, the boundary between classical and quantum can be shifted in either direction at the observer's discretion. That is, the observer has the freedom to move what would become known as the "Heisenberg cut" without changing any physically meaningful predictions.[8]: 86  On the other hand, Bohr argued both systems are quantum in principle, and the object-instrument distinction (the "cut") is dictated by the experimental arrangement. For Bohr, the "cut" was not a change in the dynamical laws that govern the systems in question, but a change in the language applied to them.[4][39]
  4. During an observation, the system must interact with a laboratory device. When that device makes a measurement, the wave function of the system collapses, irreversibly reducing to an eigenstate of the observable that is registered. The result of this process is a tangible record of the event, made by a potentiality becoming an actuality.[note 4]
  5. Statements about measurements that are not actually made do not have meaning. For example, there is no meaning to the statement that a photon traversed the upper path of a Mach–Zehnder interferometer unless the interferometer were actually built in such a way that the path taken by the photon is detected and registered.[8]: 88 
  6. Wave functions are objective, in that they do not depend upon personal opinions of individual physicists or other such arbitrary influences.[8]: 509–512 

Another issue of importance where Bohr and Heisenberg disagreed is wave–particle duality. Bohr maintained that the distinction between a wave view and a particle view was defined by a distinction between experimental setups, whereas Heisenberg held that it was defined by the possibility of viewing the mathematical formulas as referring to waves or particles. Bohr thought that a particular experimental setup would display either a wave picture or a particle picture, but not both. Heisenberg thought that every mathematical formulation was capable of both wave and particle interpretations.[40][41]

Nature of the wave function

A wave function is a mathematical entity that provides a probability distribution for the outcomes of each possible measurement on a system. Knowledge of the wave function together with the rules for the system's evolution in time exhausts all that can be predicted about the system's behavior. Generally, Copenhagen-type interpretations deny that the wave function provides a directly apprehensible image of an ordinary material body or a discernible component of some such,[42][43] or anything more than a theoretical concept.

Probabilities via the Born rule

The Born rule is essential to the Copenhagen interpretation.[44] Formulated by Max Born in 1926, it gives the probability that a measurement of a quantum system will yield a given result. In its simplest form, it states that the probability density of finding a particle at a given point, when measured, is proportional to the square of the magnitude of the particle's wave function at that point.[note 5]

Collapse

A common perception of "the" Copenhagen interpretation is that an important part of it is the "collapse" of the wave function.[3] In the act of measurement, it is postulated, the wave function of a system can change suddenly and discontinuously. Prior to a measurement, a wave function involves the various probabilities for the different potential outcomes of that measurement. But when the apparatus registers one of those outcomes, no traces of the others linger.

Heisenberg spoke of the wave function as representing available knowledge of a system, and did not use the term "collapse", but instead termed it "reduction" of the wave function to a new state representing the change in available knowledge which occurs once a particular phenomenon is registered by the apparatus.[49] According to Howard and Faye, the writings of Bohr do not mention wave function collapse.[12][3]

Because they assert that the existence of an observed value depends upon the intercession of the observer, Copenhagen-type interpretations are sometimes called "subjective". This term is rejected by many Copenhagenists because the process of observation is mechanical and does not depend on the individuality of the observer.[50] Wolfgang Pauli, for example, insisted that measurement results could be obtained and recorded by "objective registering apparatus".[5]: 117–123  As Heisenberg wrote,

Of course the introduction of the observer must not be misunderstood to imply that some kind of subjective features are to be brought into the description of nature. The observer has, rather, only the function of registering decisions, i.e., processes in space and time, and it does not matter whether the observer is an apparatus or a human being; but the registration, i.e., the transition from the "possible" to the "actual," is absolutely necessary here and cannot be omitted from the interpretation of quantum theory.[22]: 137 

In the 1970s and 1980s, the theory of decoherence helped to explain the appearance of quasi-classical realities emerging from quantum theory,[51] but was insufficient to provide a technical explanation for the apparent wave function collapse.[52]

Completion by hidden variables?

In metaphysical terms, the Copenhagen interpretation views quantum mechanics as providing knowledge of phenomena, but not as pointing to 'really existing objects', which it regards as residues of ordinary intuition. This makes it an epistemic theory. This may be contrasted with Einstein's view, that physics should look for 'really existing objects', making itself an ontic theory.[53]

The metaphysical question is sometimes asked: "Could quantum mechanics be extended by adding so-called "hidden variables" to the mathematical formalism, to convert it from an epistemic to an ontic theory?" The Copenhagen interpretation answers this with a strong 'No'.[54] It is sometimes alleged, for example by J.S. Bell, that Einstein opposed the Copenhagen interpretation because he believed that the answer to that question of "hidden variables" was "yes". By contrast, Max Jammer writes "Einstein never proposed a hidden variable theory."[55] Einstein explored the possibility of a hidden variable theory, and wrote a paper describing his exploration, but withdrew it from publication because he felt it was faulty.[56][57]

Acceptance among physicists

During the 1930s and 1940s, views about quantum mechanics attributed to Bohr and emphasizing complementarity became commonplace among physicists. Textbooks of the time generally maintained the principle that the numerical value of a physical quantity is not meaningful or does not exist until it is measured.[58]: 248  Prominent physicists associated with Copenhagen-type interpretations have included Lev Landau,[58][59] Wolfgang Pauli,[59] Rudolf Peierls,[60] Asher Peres,[61] Léon Rosenfeld,[4] and Ray Streater.[62]

Throughout much of the 20th century, the Copenhagen tradition had overwhelming acceptance among physicists.[58][63] According to a very informal poll (some people voted for multiple interpretations) conducted at a quantum mechanics conference in 1997,[64] the Copenhagen interpretation remained the most widely accepted label that physicists applied to their own views. A similar result was found in a poll conducted in 2011.[65]

Consequences

The nature of the Copenhagen interpretation is exposed by considering a number of experiments and paradoxes.

Schrödinger's cat

This thought experiment highlights the implications that accepting uncertainty at the microscopic level has on macroscopic objects. A cat is put in a sealed box, with its life or death made dependent on the state of a subatomic particle.[8]: 91  Thus a description of the cat during the course of the experiment—having been entangled with the state of a subatomic particle—becomes a "blur" of "living and dead cat." But this can't be accurate because it implies the cat is actually both dead and alive until the box is opened to check on it. But the cat, if it survives, will only remember being alive. Schrödinger resists "so naively accepting as valid a 'blurred model' for representing reality."[66] How can the cat be both alive and dead?

In Copenhagen-type views, the wave function reflects our knowledge of the system. The wave function   means that, once the cat is observed, there is a 50% chance it will be dead, and 50% chance it will be alive.[61] (Some versions of the Copenhagen interpretation reject the idea that a wave function can be assigned to a physical system that meets the everyday definition of "cat"; in this view, the correct quantum-mechanical description of the cat-and-particle system must include a superselection rule.[62]: 51 )

Wigner's friend

"Wigner's friend" is a thought experiment intended to make that of Schrödinger's cat more striking by involving two conscious beings, traditionally known as Wigner and his friend.[8]: 91–92  (In more recent literature, they may also be known as Alice and Bob, per the convention of describing protocols in information theory.[67]) Wigner puts his friend in with the cat. The external observer believes the system is in state  . However, his friend is convinced that the cat is alive, i.e. for him, the cat is in the state  . How can Wigner and his friend see different wave functions?

In a Heisenbergian view, the answer depends on the positioning of Heisenberg cut, which can be placed arbitrarily (at least according to Heisenberg, though not to Bohr[4]). If Wigner's friend is positioned on the same side of the cut as the external observer, his measurements collapse the wave function for both observers. If he is positioned on the cat's side, his interaction with the cat is not considered a measurement.[68] Different Copenhagen-type interpretations take different positions as to whether observers can be placed on the quantum side of the cut.[68]

Double-slit experiment

In the basic version of this experiment, a light source, such as a laser beam, illuminates a plate pierced by two parallel slits, and the light passing through the slits is observed on a screen behind the plate. The wave nature of light causes the light waves passing through the two slits to interfere, producing bright and dark bands on the screen – a result that would not be expected if light consisted of classical particles. However, the light is always found to be absorbed at the screen at discrete points, as individual particles (not waves); the interference pattern appears via the varying density of these particle hits on the screen. Furthermore, versions of the experiment that include detectors at the slits find that each detected photon passes through one slit (as would a classical particle), and not through both slits (as would a wave). However, such experiments demonstrate that particles do not form the interference pattern if one detects which slit they pass through.[69]: 73–76 

According to Bohr's complementarity principle, light is neither a wave nor a stream of particles. A particular experiment can demonstrate particle behavior (passing through a definite slit) or wave behavior (interference), but not both at the same time.[70]

The same experiment can in theory be performed with any physical system: electrons, protons, atoms, molecules, viruses, bacteria, cats, humans, elephants, planets, etc. In practice it has been performed for light, electrons, buckminsterfullerene,[71][72] and some atoms. Due to the smallness of Planck's constant it is practically impossible to realize experiments that directly reveal the wave nature of any system bigger than a few atoms; but in general quantum mechanics considers all matter as possessing both particle and wave behaviors. Larger systems (like viruses, bacteria, cats, etc.) are considered as "classical" ones but only as an approximation, not exactly.[note 6]

Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen paradox

This thought experiment involves a pair of particles prepared in what later authors would refer to as an entangled state. In a 1935 paper, Einstein, Boris Podolsky, and Nathan Rosen pointed out that, in this state, if the position of the first particle were measured, the result of measuring the position of the second particle could be predicted. If instead the momentum of the first particle were measured, then the result of measuring the momentum of the second particle could be predicted. They argued that no action taken on the first particle could instantaneously affect the other, since this would involve information being transmitted faster than light, which is forbidden by the theory of relativity. They invoked a principle, later known as the "EPR criterion of reality", positing that, "If, without in any way disturbing a system, we can predict with certainty (i.e., with probability equal to unity) the value of a physical quantity, then there exists an element of reality corresponding to that quantity". From this, they inferred that the second particle must have a definite value of position and of momentum prior to either being measured.[73]

Bohr's response to the EPR paper was published in the Physical Review later that same year.[74] He argued that EPR had reasoned fallaciously. Because measurements of position and of momentum are complementary, making the choice to measure one excludes the possibility of measuring the other. Consequently, a fact deduced regarding one arrangement of laboratory apparatus could not be combined with a fact deduced by means of the other, and so, the inference of predetermined position and momentum values for the second particle was not valid. Bohr concluded that EPR's "arguments do not justify their conclusion that the quantum description turns out to be essentially incomplete."[74]

Criticism

Incompleteness and indeterminism

 
Niels Bohr and Albert Einstein, pictured here at Paul Ehrenfest's home in Leiden (December 1925), had a long-running collegial dispute about what quantum mechanics implied for the nature of reality.

Einstein was an early and persistent critic of the Copenhagen school. Bohr and Heisenberg advanced the position that no physical property could be understood without an act of measurement, while Einstein refused to accept this. Abraham Pais recalled a walk with Einstein when the two discussed quantum mechanics: "Einstein suddenly stopped, turned to me and asked whether I really believed that the moon exists only when I look at it."[75] While Einstein did not doubt that quantum mechanics was a correct physical theory in that it gave correct predictions, he maintained that it could not be a complete theory. The most famous product of his efforts to argue the incompleteness of quantum theory is the Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen thought experiment, which was intended to show that physical properties like position and momentum have values even if not measured.[note 7] The argument of EPR was not generally persuasive to other physicists.[58]: 189–251 

Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker, while participating in a colloquium at Cambridge, denied that the Copenhagen interpretation asserted "What cannot be observed does not exist". Instead, he suggested that the Copenhagen interpretation follows the principle "What is observed certainly exists; about what is not observed we are still free to make suitable assumptions. We use that freedom to avoid paradoxes."[25]

Einstein was likewise dissatisfied with the indeterminism of quantum theory. Regarding the possibility of randomness in nature, Einstein said that he was "convinced that He [God] does not throw dice."[80] Bohr, in response, reputedly said that "it cannot be for us to tell God, how he is to run the world".[note 8]

The "shifty split"

Much criticism of Copenhagen-type interpretations has focused on the need for a classical domain where observers or measuring devices can reside, and the imprecision of how the boundary between quantum and classical might be defined. John Bell called this the "shifty split".[6] As typically portrayed, Copenhagen-type interpretations involve two different kinds of time evolution for wave functions, the deterministic flow according to the Schrödinger equation and the probabilistic jump during measurement, without a clear criterion for when each kind applies. Why should these two different processes exist, when physicists and laboratory equipment are made of the same matter as the rest of the universe?[81] And if there is somehow a split, where should it be placed? Steven Weinberg writes that the traditional presentation gives "no way to locate the boundary between the realms in which [...] quantum mechanics does or does not apply."[82]

The problem of thinking in terms of classical measurements of a quantum system becomes particularly acute in the field of quantum cosmology, where the quantum system is the universe.[83][84] How does an observer stand outside the universe in order to measure it, and who was there to observe the universe in its earliest stages? Advocates of Copenhagen-type interpretations have disputed the seriousness of these objections. Rudolf Peierls noted that "the observer does not have to be contemporaneous with the event"; for example, we study the early universe through the cosmic microwave background, and we can apply quantum mechanics to that just as well as to any electromagnetic field.[60] Likewise, Asher Peres argued that physicists are, conceptually, outside those degrees of freedom that cosmology studies, and applying quantum mechanics to the radius of the universe while neglecting the physicists in it is no different from quantizing the electric current in a superconductor while neglecting the atomic-level details.[39]

You may object that there is only one universe, but likewise there is only one SQUID in my laboratory.[39]

E. T. Jaynes,[85] an advocate of Bayesian probability, argued that probability is a measure of a state of information about the physical world, and so regarding it as a physical phenomenon would be an example of a mind projection fallacy. Jaynes described the mathematical formalism of quantum physics as "a peculiar mixture describing in part realities of Nature, in part incomplete human information about Nature—all scrambled up together by Heisenberg and Bohr into an omelette that nobody has seen how to unscramble".[86]

Alternatives

The ensemble interpretation is similar; it offers an interpretation of the wave function, but not for single particles. The consistent histories interpretation advertises itself as "Copenhagen done right".[87] More recently, interpretations inspired by quantum information theory like QBism[88] and relational quantum mechanics[89] have attracted support.[65][90]

Under realism and determinism, if the wave function is regarded as ontologically real, and collapse is entirely rejected, a many-worlds interpretation results. If wave function collapse is regarded as ontologically real as well, an objective collapse theory is obtained. Bohmian mechanics shows that it is possible to reformulate quantum mechanics to make it deterministic, at the price of making it explicitly nonlocal. It attributes not only a wave function to a physical system, but in addition a real position, that evolves deterministically under a nonlocal guiding equation. The evolution of a physical system is given at all times by the Schrödinger equation together with the guiding equation; there is never a collapse of the wave function.[91] The transactional interpretation is also explicitly nonlocal.[92]

Some physicists espoused views in the "Copenhagen spirit" and then went on to advocate other interpretations. For example, David Bohm and Alfred Landé both wrote textbooks that put forth ideas in the Bohr–Heisenberg tradition, and later promoted nonlocal hidden variables and an ensemble interpretation respectively.[58]: 453  John Archibald Wheeler began his career as an "apostle of Niels Bohr";[93] he then supervised the PhD thesis of Hugh Everett that proposed the many-worlds interpretation. After supporting Everett's work for several years, he began to distance himself from the many-worlds interpretation in the 1970s.[94][95] Late in life, he wrote that while the Copenhagen interpretation might fairly be called "the fog from the north", it "remains the best interpretation of the quantum that we have".[96]

Other physicists, while influenced by the Copenhagen tradition, have expressed frustration at how it took the mathematical formalism of quantum theory as given, rather than trying to understand how it might arise from something more fundamental. This dissatisfaction has motivated new interpretative variants as well as technical work in quantum foundations.[63][97] Physicists who have suggested that the Copenhagen tradition needs to be built upon or extended include Rudolf Haag and Anton Zeilinger.[84][98]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As Heisenberg wrote in Physics and Philosophy (1958): "I remember discussions with Bohr which went through many hours till very late at night and ended almost in despair; and when at the end of the discussion I went alone for a walk in the neighbouring park I repeated to myself again and again the question: Can nature possibly be so absurd as it seemed to us in these atomic experiments?"
  2. ^ "There seems to be at least as many different Copenhagen interpretations as people who use that term, probably there are more. For example, in two classic articles on the foundations of quantum mechanics, Ballentine (1970) and Stapp (1972) give diametrically opposite definitions of 'Copenhagen.'"[33]
  3. ^ Bohr declared, "In the first place, we must recognize that a measurement can mean nothing else than the unambiguous comparison of some property of the object under investigation with a corresponding property of another system, serving as a measuring instrument, and for which this property is directly determinable according to its definition in everyday language or in the terminology of classical physics."[37] Heisenberg wrote, "Every description of phenomena, of experiments and their results, rests upon language as the only means of communication. The words of this language represent the concepts of ordinary life, which in the scientific language of physics may be refined to the concepts of classical physics. These concepts are the only tools for an unambiguous communication about events, about the setting up of experiments and about their results."[38]: 127 
  4. ^ Heisenberg wrote, "It is well known that the 'reduction of the wave packets' always appears in the Copenhagen interpretation when the transition is completed from the possible to the actual. The probability function, which covered a wide range of possibilities, is suddenly reduced to a much narrower range by the fact that the experiment has led to a definite result, that actually a certain event has happened. In the formalism this reduction requires that the so-called interference of probabilities, which is the most characteristic phenomena [sic] of quantum theory, is destroyed by the partly undefinable and irreversible interactions of the system with the measuring apparatus and the rest of the world."[38]: 125  Bohr suggested that "irreversibility" was "characteristic of the very concept of observation", an idea that Weizsäcker would later elaborate upon, trying to formulate a rigorous mathematical notion of irreversibility using thermodynamics, and thus show that irreversibility results in the classical approximation of the world.[4] See also Stenholm.[31]
  5. ^ While Born himself described his contribution as the "statistical interpretation" of the wave function,[45][46] the term "statistical interpretation" has also been used as a synonym for the ensemble interpretation.[47][48]
  6. ^ The meaning of "larger" is not easy to quantify. As Omnès writes, "One cannot even expect a sweeping theorem stating once and for all that every macroscopic object obeys classical physics as soon as it is big enough, when, for instance, the number of its atoms is large enough. There are two reasons for this. The first one comes from chaotic systems: it turns out that their classical dynamical evolution ends up showing significant differences at the level of Planck's constant after a finite time. Another even more cogent reason is that one now knows examples of superconducting macroscopic systems behaving in a quantum way under special circumstances ... The theorems predicting classical behavior of a macroscopic quantum system must therefore rely upon specific dynamical conditions, which will have to be made clear, though they hold very frequently."[8]: 202 
  7. ^ The published form of the EPR argument was due to Podolsky, and Einstein himself was not satisfied with it. In his own publications and correspondence, Einstein used a different argument to insist that quantum mechanics is an incomplete theory.[76][77][78][79]
  8. ^ Bohr recollected his reply to Einstein at the 1927 Solvay Congress in his essay "Discussion with Einstein on Epistemological Problems in Atomic Physics", in Albert Einstein, Philosopher–Scientist, ed. Paul Arthur Shilpp, Harper, 1949, p. 211: "...in spite of all divergencies of approach and opinion, a most humorous spirit animated the discussions. On his side, Einstein mockingly asked us whether we could really believe that the providential authorities took recourse to dice-playing ("ob der liebe Gott würfelt"), to which I replied by pointing at the great caution, already called for by ancient thinkers, in ascribing attributes to Providence in everyday language." Werner Heisenberg, who also attended the congress, recalled the exchange in Encounters with Einstein, Princeton University Press, 1983, p. 117: "But he [Einstein] still stood by his watchword, which he clothed in the words: 'God does not play at dice.' To which Bohr could only answer: 'But still, it cannot be for us to tell God, how he is to run the world.'"

References

  1. ^ See, for example:
    • Przibram, K., ed. (2015) [1967]. Letters on Wave Mechanics: Correspondence with H. A. Lorentz, Max Planck, and Erwin Schrödinger. Translated by Klein, Martin J. Philosophical Library/Open Road. ISBN 9781453204689. the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics, [was] developed principally by Heisenberg and Bohr, and based on Born's statistical interpretation of the wave function.
    • Buckley, Paul; Peat, F. David; Bohm; Dirac; Heisenberg; Pattee; Penrose; Prigogine; Rosen; Rosenfeld; Somorjai; Weizsäcker; Wheeler (1979). "Leon Rosenfeld". In Buckley, Paul; Peat, F. David (eds.). A Question of Physics: Conversations in Physics and Biology. University of Toronto Press. pp. 17–33. ISBN 9781442651661. JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctt15jjc3t.5. The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory, ... grew out of discussions between Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg...
    • Gbur, Gregory J. (2019). Falling Felines and Fundamental Physics. Yale University Press. pp. 264–290. doi:10.2307/j.ctvqc6g7s.17. S2CID 243353224. Heisenberg worked under Bohr at an institute in Copenhagen. Together they compiled all existing knowledge of quantum physics into a coherent system that is known today as the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics.
  2. ^ See, for example:
    • Siddiqui, Shabnam; Singh, Chandralekha (2017). "How diverse are physics instructors' attitudes and approaches to teaching undergraduate level quantum mechanics?". European Journal of Physics. 38 (3): 035703. Bibcode:2017EJPh...38c5703S. doi:10.1088/1361-6404/aa6131.
    • Stapp, Henry Pierce (1997). "The Copenhagen Interpretation". The Journal of Mind and Behavior. Institute of Mind and Behavior, Inc. 18 (2/3): 127–54. JSTOR 43853817. led by Bohr and Heisenberg ... was nominally accepted by almost all textbooks and practical workers in the field.
    • Bell, John S. (1987). Speakable and Unspeakable in quantum Mechanics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  3. ^ a b c d e Faye, Jan (2019). "Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Camilleri, K.; Schlosshauer, M. (2015). "Niels Bohr as Philosopher of Experiment: Does Decoherence Theory Challenge Bohr's Doctrine of Classical Concepts?". Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics. 49: 73–83. arXiv:1502.06547. Bibcode:2015SHPMP..49...73C. doi:10.1016/j.shpsb.2015.01.005. S2CID 27697360.
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    • Smith, Quentin (1997). "The Ontological Interpretation of the Wave Function of the Universe". The Monist. Oxford University Press. 80 (1): 160–185. doi:10.5840/monist19978015. JSTOR 27903516. Since the late 1920s, the orthodox interpretation was taken to be the Copenhagen Interpretation
    • Weinberg, Steven (2018). "The Trouble with Quantum Mechanics". Third Thoughts. Harvard University Press. pp. 124–142. doi:10.2307/j.ctvckq5b7.17. ISBN 9780674975323. JSTOR j.ctvckq5b7.17. One response to this puzzle was given in the 1920s by Niels Bohr, in what came to be called the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics.
    • Hanson, Norwood Russell (1959). "Five Cautions for the Copenhagen Interpretation's Critics". Philosophy of Science. The University of Chicago Press, Philosophy of Science Association. 26 (4): 325–337. doi:10.1086/287687. JSTOR 185366. S2CID 170786589. Feyerabend and Bohm are almost exclusively concerned with the inadequacies of the Bohr-Interpretation (which originates in Copenhagen). Both understress a much less incautious view, which I shall call 'the Copenhagen Interpretation' (which originates in Leipzig and presides at Göttingen, Munich, Cambridge, Princeton,―and almost everywhere else too).
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  98. ^ Zeilinger, Anton (1999). "A foundational principle for quantum mechanics". Foundations of Physics. 29 (4): 631–643. doi:10.1023/A:1018820410908. S2CID 16514757. Suffice it to say here that, in my view, the principle naturally supports and extends the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics. It is evident that one of the immediate consequences is that in physics we cannot talk about reality independent of what can be said about reality. Likewise it does not make sense to reduce the task of physics to just making subjective statements, because any statements about the physical world must ultimately be subject to experiment. Therefore, while in a classical worldview, reality is a primary concept prior to and independent of observation with all its properties, in the emerging view of quantum mechanics the notions of reality and of information are on an equal footing. One implies the other and neither one is sufficient to obtain a complete understanding of the world.

Further reading

copenhagen, interpretation, collection, views, about, meaning, quantum, mechanics, principally, attributed, niels, bohr, werner, heisenberg, oldest, numerous, proposed, interpretations, quantum, mechanics, features, date, development, quantum, mechanics, durin. The Copenhagen interpretation is a collection of views about the meaning of quantum mechanics principally attributed to Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg 1 It is one of the oldest of numerous proposed interpretations of quantum mechanics as features of it date to the development of quantum mechanics during 1925 1927 and it remains one of the most commonly taught 2 There is no definitive historical statement of what the Copenhagen interpretation is There are some fundamental agreements and disagreements between the views of Bohr and Heisenberg 3 4 For example Heisenberg emphasized a sharp cut between the observer or the instrument and the system being observed 5 133 while Bohr offered an interpretation that is independent of a subjective observer or measurement or collapse which relies on an irreversible or effectively irreversible process which could take place within the quantum system 6 Features common to Copenhagen type interpretations include the idea that quantum mechanics is intrinsically indeterministic with probabilities calculated using the Born rule and the principle of complementarity which states that objects have certain pairs of complementary properties that cannot all be observed or measured simultaneously 7 Moreover the act of observing or measuring an object is irreversible and no truth can be attributed to an object except according to the results of its measurement Copenhagen type interpretations hold that quantum descriptions are objective in that they are independent of physicists mental arbitrariness 8 85 90 Over the years there have been many objections to aspects of Copenhagen type interpretations including the discontinuous and stochastic nature of the observation or measurement process the apparent subjectivity of requiring an observer the difficulty of defining what might count as a measuring device and the seeming reliance upon classical physics in describing such devices Contents 1 Background 2 Origin and use of the term 3 Principles 4 Nature of the wave function 4 1 Probabilities via the Born rule 4 2 Collapse 4 3 Completion by hidden variables 5 Acceptance among physicists 6 Consequences 6 1 Schrodinger s cat 6 2 Wigner s friend 6 3 Double slit experiment 6 4 Einstein Podolsky Rosen paradox 7 Criticism 7 1 Incompleteness and indeterminism 7 2 The shifty split 8 Alternatives 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further readingBackground EditMain article Old quantum theory Starting in 1900 investigations into atomic and subatomic phenomena forced a revision to the basic concepts of classical physics However it was not until a quarter century had elapsed that the revision reached the status of a coherent theory During the intervening period now known as the time of the old quantum theory physicists worked with approximations and heuristic corrections to classical physics Notable results from this period include Max Planck s calculation of the blackbody radiation spectrum Albert Einstein s explanation of the photoelectric effect Einstein and Peter Debye s work on the specific heat of solids Niels Bohr and Hendrika Johanna van Leeuwen s proof that classical physics cannot account for diamagnetism Bohr s model of the hydrogen atom and Arnold Sommerfeld s extension of the Bohr model to include relativistic effects From 1922 through 1925 this method of heuristic corrections encountered increasing difficulties for example the Bohr Sommerfeld model could not be extended from hydrogen to the next simplest case the helium atom 9 The transition from the old quantum theory to full fledged quantum physics began in 1925 when Werner Heisenberg presented a treatment of electron behavior based on discussing only observable quantities meaning to Heisenberg the frequencies of light that atoms absorbed and emitted 10 Max Born then realized that in Heisenberg s theory the classical variables of position and momentum would instead be represented by matrices mathematical objects that can be multiplied together like numbers with the crucial difference that the order of multiplication matters Erwin Schrodinger presented an equation that treated the electron as a wave and Born discovered that the way to successfully interpret the wave function that appeared in the Schrodinger equation was as a tool for calculating probabilities 11 Quantum mechanics cannot easily be reconciled with everyday language and observation and has often seemed counter intuitive to physicists including its inventors note 1 The ideas grouped together as the Copenhagen interpretation suggest a way to think about how the mathematics of quantum theory relates to physical reality Origin and use of the term Edit The Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen The term refers to the city of Copenhagen in Denmark and was apparently coined during the 1950s 12 Earlier during the mid 1920s Heisenberg had been an assistant to Bohr at his institute in Copenhagen where they helped originate quantum mechanical theory 13 14 At the 1927 Solvay Conference a dual talk by Max Born and Heisenberg declared we consider quantum mechanics to be a closed theory whose fundamental physical and mathematical assumptions are no longer susceptible of any modification 15 16 In 1929 Heisenberg gave a series of invited lectures at the University of Chicago explaining the new field of quantum mechanics The lectures then served as the basis for his textbook The Physical Principles of the Quantum Theory published in 1930 17 In the book s preface Heisenberg wrote On the whole the book contains nothing that is not to be found in previous publications particularly in the investigations of Bohr The purpose of the book seems to me to be fulfilled if it contributes somewhat to the diffusion of that Kopenhagener Geist der Quantentheorie Copenhagen spirit of quantum theory if I may so express myself which has directed the entire development of modern atomic physics The term Copenhagen interpretation suggests something more than just a spirit such as some definite set of rules for interpreting the mathematical formalism of quantum mechanics presumably dating back to the 1920s 18 However no such text exists and the writings of Bohr and Heisenberg contradict each other on several important issues 4 It appears that the particular term with its more definite sense was coined by Heisenberg around 1955 12 while criticizing alternative interpretations e g David Bohm s 19 that had been developed 20 21 Lectures with the titles The Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Theory and Criticisms and Counterproposals to the Copenhagen Interpretation that Heisenberg delivered in 1955 are reprinted in the collection Physics and Philosophy 22 Before the book was released for sale Heisenberg privately expressed regret for having used the term due to its suggestion of the existence of other interpretations that he considered to be nonsense 23 In a 1960 review of Heisenberg s book Bohr s close collaborator Leon Rosenfeld called the term an ambiguous expression and suggested it be discarded 24 However this did not come to pass and the term entered widespread use 12 21 Principles EditThere is no uniquely definitive statement of the Copenhagen interpretation 4 25 26 27 The term encompasses the views developed by a number of scientists and philosophers during the second quarter of the 20th century 28 This lack of a single authoritative source that establishes the Copenhagen interpretation is one difficulty with discussing it another complication is that the philosophical background familiar to Einstein Bohr Heisenberg and contemporaries is much less so to physicists and even philosophers of physics in more recent times 9 Bohr and Heisenberg never totally agreed on how to understand the mathematical formalism of quantum mechanics 29 and Bohr distanced himself from what he considered Heisenberg s more subjective interpretation 3 Bohr offered an interpretation that is independent of a subjective observer or measurement or collapse instead an irreversible or effectively irreversible process causes the decay of quantum coherence which imparts the classical behavior of observation or measurement 6 30 31 32 Different commentators and researchers have associated various ideas with the term 16 Asher Peres remarked that very different sometimes opposite views are presented as the Copenhagen interpretation by different authors note 2 N David Mermin coined the phrase Shut up and calculate to summarize Copenhagen type views a saying often misattributed to Richard Feynman and which Mermin later found insufficiently nuanced 34 35 Mermin described the Copenhagen interpretation as coming in different versions varieties or flavors 36 Some basic principles generally accepted as part of the interpretation include the following 3 Quantum mechanics is intrinsically indeterministic The correspondence principle in the appropriate limit quantum theory comes to resemble classical physics and reproduces the classical predictions The Born rule the wave function of a system yields probabilities for the outcomes of measurements upon that system Complementarity certain properties cannot be jointly defined for the same system at the same time In order to talk about a specific property of a system that system must be considered within the context of a specific laboratory arrangement Observable quantities corresponding to mutually exclusive laboratory arrangements cannot be predicted together but considering multiple such mutually exclusive experiments is necessary to characterize a system Hans Primas and Roland Omnes give a more detailed breakdown that in addition to the above includes the following 8 85 Quantum physics applies to individual objects The probabilities computed by the Born rule do not require an ensemble or collection of identically prepared systems to understand The results provided by measuring devices are essentially classical and should be described in ordinary language This was particularly emphasized by Bohr and was accepted by Heisenberg note 3 Per the above point the device used to observe a system must be described in classical language while the system under observation is treated in quantum terms This is a particularly subtle issue for which Bohr and Heisenberg came to differing conclusions According to Heisenberg the boundary between classical and quantum can be shifted in either direction at the observer s discretion That is the observer has the freedom to move what would become known as the Heisenberg cut without changing any physically meaningful predictions 8 86 On the other hand Bohr argued both systems are quantum in principle and the object instrument distinction the cut is dictated by the experimental arrangement For Bohr the cut was not a change in the dynamical laws that govern the systems in question but a change in the language applied to them 4 39 During an observation the system must interact with a laboratory device When that device makes a measurement the wave function of the system collapses irreversibly reducing to an eigenstate of the observable that is registered The result of this process is a tangible record of the event made by a potentiality becoming an actuality note 4 Statements about measurements that are not actually made do not have meaning For example there is no meaning to the statement that a photon traversed the upper path of a Mach Zehnder interferometer unless the interferometer were actually built in such a way that the path taken by the photon is detected and registered 8 88 Wave functions are objective in that they do not depend upon personal opinions of individual physicists or other such arbitrary influences 8 509 512 Another issue of importance where Bohr and Heisenberg disagreed is wave particle duality Bohr maintained that the distinction between a wave view and a particle view was defined by a distinction between experimental setups whereas Heisenberg held that it was defined by the possibility of viewing the mathematical formulas as referring to waves or particles Bohr thought that a particular experimental setup would display either a wave picture or a particle picture but not both Heisenberg thought that every mathematical formulation was capable of both wave and particle interpretations 40 41 Nature of the wave function EditA wave function is a mathematical entity that provides a probability distribution for the outcomes of each possible measurement on a system Knowledge of the wave function together with the rules for the system s evolution in time exhausts all that can be predicted about the system s behavior Generally Copenhagen type interpretations deny that the wave function provides a directly apprehensible image of an ordinary material body or a discernible component of some such 42 43 or anything more than a theoretical concept Probabilities via the Born rule Edit Main article Born rule The Born rule is essential to the Copenhagen interpretation 44 Formulated by Max Born in 1926 it gives the probability that a measurement of a quantum system will yield a given result In its simplest form it states that the probability density of finding a particle at a given point when measured is proportional to the square of the magnitude of the particle s wave function at that point note 5 Collapse Edit Main article Wave function collapse A common perception of the Copenhagen interpretation is that an important part of it is the collapse of the wave function 3 In the act of measurement it is postulated the wave function of a system can change suddenly and discontinuously Prior to a measurement a wave function involves the various probabilities for the different potential outcomes of that measurement But when the apparatus registers one of those outcomes no traces of the others linger Heisenberg spoke of the wave function as representing available knowledge of a system and did not use the term collapse but instead termed it reduction of the wave function to a new state representing the change in available knowledge which occurs once a particular phenomenon is registered by the apparatus 49 According to Howard and Faye the writings of Bohr do not mention wave function collapse 12 3 Because they assert that the existence of an observed value depends upon the intercession of the observer Copenhagen type interpretations are sometimes called subjective This term is rejected by many Copenhagenists because the process of observation is mechanical and does not depend on the individuality of the observer 50 Wolfgang Pauli for example insisted that measurement results could be obtained and recorded by objective registering apparatus 5 117 123 As Heisenberg wrote Of course the introduction of the observer must not be misunderstood to imply that some kind of subjective features are to be brought into the description of nature The observer has rather only the function of registering decisions i e processes in space and time and it does not matter whether the observer is an apparatus or a human being but the registration i e the transition from the possible to the actual is absolutely necessary here and cannot be omitted from the interpretation of quantum theory 22 137 In the 1970s and 1980s the theory of decoherence helped to explain the appearance of quasi classical realities emerging from quantum theory 51 but was insufficient to provide a technical explanation for the apparent wave function collapse 52 Completion by hidden variables Edit Main article Hidden variable theory In metaphysical terms the Copenhagen interpretation views quantum mechanics as providing knowledge of phenomena but not as pointing to really existing objects which it regards as residues of ordinary intuition This makes it an epistemic theory This may be contrasted with Einstein s view that physics should look for really existing objects making itself an ontic theory 53 The metaphysical question is sometimes asked Could quantum mechanics be extended by adding so called hidden variables to the mathematical formalism to convert it from an epistemic to an ontic theory The Copenhagen interpretation answers this with a strong No 54 It is sometimes alleged for example by J S Bell that Einstein opposed the Copenhagen interpretation because he believed that the answer to that question of hidden variables was yes By contrast Max Jammer writes Einstein never proposed a hidden variable theory 55 Einstein explored the possibility of a hidden variable theory and wrote a paper describing his exploration but withdrew it from publication because he felt it was faulty 56 57 Acceptance among physicists EditDuring the 1930s and 1940s views about quantum mechanics attributed to Bohr and emphasizing complementarity became commonplace among physicists Textbooks of the time generally maintained the principle that the numerical value of a physical quantity is not meaningful or does not exist until it is measured 58 248 Prominent physicists associated with Copenhagen type interpretations have included Lev Landau 58 59 Wolfgang Pauli 59 Rudolf Peierls 60 Asher Peres 61 Leon Rosenfeld 4 and Ray Streater 62 Throughout much of the 20th century the Copenhagen tradition had overwhelming acceptance among physicists 58 63 According to a very informal poll some people voted for multiple interpretations conducted at a quantum mechanics conference in 1997 64 the Copenhagen interpretation remained the most widely accepted label that physicists applied to their own views A similar result was found in a poll conducted in 2011 65 Consequences EditThe nature of the Copenhagen interpretation is exposed by considering a number of experiments and paradoxes Schrodinger s cat Edit Main article Schrodinger s cat This thought experiment highlights the implications that accepting uncertainty at the microscopic level has on macroscopic objects A cat is put in a sealed box with its life or death made dependent on the state of a subatomic particle 8 91 Thus a description of the cat during the course of the experiment having been entangled with the state of a subatomic particle becomes a blur of living and dead cat But this can t be accurate because it implies the cat is actually both dead and alive until the box is opened to check on it But the cat if it survives will only remember being alive Schrodinger resists so naively accepting as valid a blurred model for representing reality 66 How can the cat be both alive and dead In Copenhagen type views the wave function reflects our knowledge of the system The wave function dead alive 2 displaystyle text dead rangle text alive rangle sqrt 2 means that once the cat is observed there is a 50 chance it will be dead and 50 chance it will be alive 61 Some versions of the Copenhagen interpretation reject the idea that a wave function can be assigned to a physical system that meets the everyday definition of cat in this view the correct quantum mechanical description of the cat and particle system must include a superselection rule 62 51 Wigner s friend Edit Main article Wigner s friend Wigner s friend is a thought experiment intended to make that of Schrodinger s cat more striking by involving two conscious beings traditionally known as Wigner and his friend 8 91 92 In more recent literature they may also be known as Alice and Bob per the convention of describing protocols in information theory 67 Wigner puts his friend in with the cat The external observer believes the system is in state dead alive 2 displaystyle text dead rangle text alive rangle sqrt 2 However his friend is convinced that the cat is alive i e for him the cat is in the state alive displaystyle text alive rangle How can Wigner and his friend see different wave functions In a Heisenbergian view the answer depends on the positioning of Heisenberg cut which can be placed arbitrarily at least according to Heisenberg though not to Bohr 4 If Wigner s friend is positioned on the same side of the cut as the external observer his measurements collapse the wave function for both observers If he is positioned on the cat s side his interaction with the cat is not considered a measurement 68 Different Copenhagen type interpretations take different positions as to whether observers can be placed on the quantum side of the cut 68 Double slit experiment Edit Main article Double slit experiment In the basic version of this experiment a light source such as a laser beam illuminates a plate pierced by two parallel slits and the light passing through the slits is observed on a screen behind the plate The wave nature of light causes the light waves passing through the two slits to interfere producing bright and dark bands on the screen a result that would not be expected if light consisted of classical particles However the light is always found to be absorbed at the screen at discrete points as individual particles not waves the interference pattern appears via the varying density of these particle hits on the screen Furthermore versions of the experiment that include detectors at the slits find that each detected photon passes through one slit as would a classical particle and not through both slits as would a wave However such experiments demonstrate that particles do not form the interference pattern if one detects which slit they pass through 69 73 76 According to Bohr s complementarity principle light is neither a wave nor a stream of particles A particular experiment can demonstrate particle behavior passing through a definite slit or wave behavior interference but not both at the same time 70 The same experiment can in theory be performed with any physical system electrons protons atoms molecules viruses bacteria cats humans elephants planets etc In practice it has been performed for light electrons buckminsterfullerene 71 72 and some atoms Due to the smallness of Planck s constant it is practically impossible to realize experiments that directly reveal the wave nature of any system bigger than a few atoms but in general quantum mechanics considers all matter as possessing both particle and wave behaviors Larger systems like viruses bacteria cats etc are considered as classical ones but only as an approximation not exactly note 6 Einstein Podolsky Rosen paradox Edit Main article EPR paradox This thought experiment involves a pair of particles prepared in what later authors would refer to as an entangled state In a 1935 paper Einstein Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen pointed out that in this state if the position of the first particle were measured the result of measuring the position of the second particle could be predicted If instead the momentum of the first particle were measured then the result of measuring the momentum of the second particle could be predicted They argued that no action taken on the first particle could instantaneously affect the other since this would involve information being transmitted faster than light which is forbidden by the theory of relativity They invoked a principle later known as the EPR criterion of reality positing that If without in any way disturbing a system we can predict with certainty i e with probability equal to unity the value of a physical quantity then there exists an element of reality corresponding to that quantity From this they inferred that the second particle must have a definite value of position and of momentum prior to either being measured 73 Bohr s response to the EPR paper was published in the Physical Review later that same year 74 He argued that EPR had reasoned fallaciously Because measurements of position and of momentum are complementary making the choice to measure one excludes the possibility of measuring the other Consequently a fact deduced regarding one arrangement of laboratory apparatus could not be combined with a fact deduced by means of the other and so the inference of predetermined position and momentum values for the second particle was not valid Bohr concluded that EPR s arguments do not justify their conclusion that the quantum description turns out to be essentially incomplete 74 Criticism EditIncompleteness and indeterminism Edit Niels Bohr and Albert Einstein pictured here at Paul Ehrenfest s home in Leiden December 1925 had a long running collegial dispute about what quantum mechanics implied for the nature of reality Einstein was an early and persistent critic of the Copenhagen school Bohr and Heisenberg advanced the position that no physical property could be understood without an act of measurement while Einstein refused to accept this Abraham Pais recalled a walk with Einstein when the two discussed quantum mechanics Einstein suddenly stopped turned to me and asked whether I really believed that the moon exists only when I look at it 75 While Einstein did not doubt that quantum mechanics was a correct physical theory in that it gave correct predictions he maintained that it could not be a complete theory The most famous product of his efforts to argue the incompleteness of quantum theory is the Einstein Podolsky Rosen thought experiment which was intended to show that physical properties like position and momentum have values even if not measured note 7 The argument of EPR was not generally persuasive to other physicists 58 189 251 Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker while participating in a colloquium at Cambridge denied that the Copenhagen interpretation asserted What cannot be observed does not exist Instead he suggested that the Copenhagen interpretation follows the principle What is observed certainly exists about what is not observed we are still free to make suitable assumptions We use that freedom to avoid paradoxes 25 Einstein was likewise dissatisfied with the indeterminism of quantum theory Regarding the possibility of randomness in nature Einstein said that he was convinced that He God does not throw dice 80 Bohr in response reputedly said that it cannot be for us to tell God how he is to run the world note 8 The shifty split Edit Much criticism of Copenhagen type interpretations has focused on the need for a classical domain where observers or measuring devices can reside and the imprecision of how the boundary between quantum and classical might be defined John Bell called this the shifty split 6 As typically portrayed Copenhagen type interpretations involve two different kinds of time evolution for wave functions the deterministic flow according to the Schrodinger equation and the probabilistic jump during measurement without a clear criterion for when each kind applies Why should these two different processes exist when physicists and laboratory equipment are made of the same matter as the rest of the universe 81 And if there is somehow a split where should it be placed Steven Weinberg writes that the traditional presentation gives no way to locate the boundary between the realms in which quantum mechanics does or does not apply 82 The problem of thinking in terms of classical measurements of a quantum system becomes particularly acute in the field of quantum cosmology where the quantum system is the universe 83 84 How does an observer stand outside the universe in order to measure it and who was there to observe the universe in its earliest stages Advocates of Copenhagen type interpretations have disputed the seriousness of these objections Rudolf Peierls noted that the observer does not have to be contemporaneous with the event for example we study the early universe through the cosmic microwave background and we can apply quantum mechanics to that just as well as to any electromagnetic field 60 Likewise Asher Peres argued that physicists are conceptually outside those degrees of freedom that cosmology studies and applying quantum mechanics to the radius of the universe while neglecting the physicists in it is no different from quantizing the electric current in a superconductor while neglecting the atomic level details 39 You may object that there is only one universe but likewise there is only one SQUID in my laboratory 39 E T Jaynes 85 an advocate of Bayesian probability argued that probability is a measure of a state of information about the physical world and so regarding it as a physical phenomenon would be an example of a mind projection fallacy Jaynes described the mathematical formalism of quantum physics as a peculiar mixture describing in part realities of Nature in part incomplete human information about Nature all scrambled up together by Heisenberg and Bohr into an omelette that nobody has seen how to unscramble 86 Alternatives EditFurther information Interpretations of quantum mechanics The ensemble interpretation is similar it offers an interpretation of the wave function but not for single particles The consistent histories interpretation advertises itself as Copenhagen done right 87 More recently interpretations inspired by quantum information theory like QBism 88 and relational quantum mechanics 89 have attracted support 65 90 Under realism and determinism if the wave function is regarded as ontologically real and collapse is entirely rejected a many worlds interpretation results If wave function collapse is regarded as ontologically real as well an objective collapse theory is obtained Bohmian mechanics shows that it is possible to reformulate quantum mechanics to make it deterministic at the price of making it explicitly nonlocal It attributes not only a wave function to a physical system but in addition a real position that evolves deterministically under a nonlocal guiding equation The evolution of a physical system is given at all times by the Schrodinger equation together with the guiding equation there is never a collapse of the wave function 91 The transactional interpretation is also explicitly nonlocal 92 Some physicists espoused views in the Copenhagen spirit and then went on to advocate other interpretations For example David Bohm and Alfred Lande both wrote textbooks that put forth ideas in the Bohr Heisenberg tradition and later promoted nonlocal hidden variables and an ensemble interpretation respectively 58 453 John Archibald Wheeler began his career as an apostle of Niels Bohr 93 he then supervised the PhD thesis of Hugh Everett that proposed the many worlds interpretation After supporting Everett s work for several years he began to distance himself from the many worlds interpretation in the 1970s 94 95 Late in life he wrote that while the Copenhagen interpretation might fairly be called the fog from the north it remains the best interpretation of the quantum that we have 96 Other physicists while influenced by the Copenhagen tradition have expressed frustration at how it took the mathematical formalism of quantum theory as given rather than trying to understand how it might arise from something more fundamental This dissatisfaction has motivated new interpretative variants as well as technical work in quantum foundations 63 97 Physicists who have suggested that the Copenhagen tradition needs to be built upon or extended include Rudolf Haag and Anton Zeilinger 84 98 See also EditBohr Einstein debates Einstein s thought experiments Fifth Solvay Conference Philosophical interpretation of classical physics Physical ontology Popper s experiment Von Neumann Wigner interpretationNotes Edit As Heisenberg wrote in Physics and Philosophy 1958 I remember discussions with Bohr which went through many hours till very late at night and ended almost in despair and when at the end of the discussion I went alone for a walk in the neighbouring park I repeated to myself again and again the question Can nature possibly be so absurd as it seemed to us in these atomic experiments There seems to be at least as many different Copenhagen interpretations as people who use that term probably there are more For example in two classic articles on the foundations of quantum mechanics Ballentine 1970 and Stapp 1972 give diametrically opposite definitions of Copenhagen 33 Bohr declared In the first place we must recognize that a measurement can mean nothing else than the unambiguous comparison of some property of the object under investigation with a corresponding property of another system serving as a measuring instrument and for which this property is directly determinable according to its definition in everyday language or in the terminology of classical physics 37 Heisenberg wrote Every description of phenomena of experiments and their results rests upon language as the only means of communication The words of this language represent the concepts of ordinary life which in the scientific language of physics may be refined to the concepts of classical physics These concepts are the only tools for an unambiguous communication about events about the setting up of experiments and about their results 38 127 Heisenberg wrote It is well known that the reduction of the wave packets always appears in the Copenhagen interpretation when the transition is completed from the possible to the actual The probability function which covered a wide range of possibilities is suddenly reduced to a much narrower range by the fact that the experiment has led to a definite result that actually a certain event has happened In the formalism this reduction requires that the so called interference of probabilities which is the most characteristic phenomena sic of quantum theory is destroyed by the partly undefinable and irreversible interactions of the system with the measuring apparatus and the rest of the world 38 125 Bohr suggested that irreversibility was characteristic of the very concept of observation an idea that Weizsacker would later elaborate upon trying to formulate a rigorous mathematical notion of irreversibility using thermodynamics and thus show that irreversibility results in the classical approximation of the world 4 See also Stenholm 31 While Born himself described his contribution as the statistical interpretation of the wave function 45 46 the term statistical interpretation has also been used as a synonym for the ensemble interpretation 47 48 The meaning of larger is not easy to quantify As Omnes writes One cannot even expect a sweeping theorem stating once and for all that every macroscopic object obeys classical physics as soon as it is big enough when for instance the number of its atoms is large enough There are two reasons for this The first one comes from chaotic systems it turns out that their classical dynamical evolution ends up showing significant differences at the level of Planck s constant after a finite time Another even more cogent reason is that one now knows examples of superconducting macroscopic systems behaving in a quantum way under special circumstances The theorems predicting classical behavior of a macroscopic quantum system must therefore rely upon specific dynamical conditions which will have to be made clear though they hold very frequently 8 202 The published form of the EPR argument was due to Podolsky and Einstein himself was not satisfied with it In his own publications and correspondence Einstein used a different argument to insist that quantum mechanics is an incomplete theory 76 77 78 79 Bohr recollected his reply to Einstein at the 1927 Solvay Congress in his essay Discussion with Einstein on Epistemological Problems in Atomic Physics in Albert Einstein Philosopher Scientist ed Paul Arthur Shilpp Harper 1949 p 211 in spite of all divergencies of approach and opinion a most humorous spirit animated the discussions On his side Einstein mockingly asked us whether we could really believe that the providential authorities took recourse to dice playing ob der liebe Gott wurfelt to which I replied by pointing at the great caution already called for by ancient thinkers in ascribing attributes to Providence in everyday language Werner Heisenberg who also attended the congress recalled the exchange in Encounters with Einstein Princeton University Press 1983 p 117 But he Einstein still stood by his watchword which he clothed in the words God does not play at dice To which Bohr could only answer But still it cannot be for us to tell God how he is to run the world References Edit See for example Przibram K ed 2015 1967 Letters on Wave Mechanics Correspondence with H A Lorentz Max Planck and Erwin Schrodinger Translated by Klein Martin J Philosophical Library Open Road ISBN 9781453204689 the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics was developed principally by Heisenberg and Bohr and based on Born s statistical interpretation of the wave function Buckley Paul Peat F David Bohm Dirac Heisenberg Pattee Penrose Prigogine Rosen Rosenfeld Somorjai Weizsacker Wheeler 1979 Leon Rosenfeld In Buckley Paul Peat F David eds A Question of Physics Conversations in Physics and Biology University of Toronto Press pp 17 33 ISBN 9781442651661 JSTOR 10 3138 j ctt15jjc3t 5 The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory grew out of discussions between Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg Gbur Gregory J 2019 Falling Felines and Fundamental Physics Yale University Press pp 264 290 doi 10 2307 j ctvqc6g7s 17 S2CID 243353224 Heisenberg worked under Bohr at an institute in Copenhagen Together they compiled all existing knowledge of quantum physics into a coherent system that is known today as the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics See for example Siddiqui Shabnam Singh Chandralekha 2017 How diverse are physics instructors attitudes and approaches to teaching undergraduate level quantum mechanics European Journal of Physics 38 3 035703 Bibcode 2017EJPh 38c5703S doi 10 1088 1361 6404 aa6131 Stapp Henry Pierce 1997 The Copenhagen Interpretation The Journal of Mind and Behavior Institute of Mind and Behavior Inc 18 2 3 127 54 JSTOR 43853817 led by Bohr and Heisenberg was nominally accepted by almost all textbooks and practical workers in the field Bell John S 1987 Speakable and Unspeakable in quantum Mechanics Cambridge Cambridge University Press a b c d e Faye Jan 2019 Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University a b c d e f g Camilleri K Schlosshauer M 2015 Niels Bohr as Philosopher of Experiment Does Decoherence Theory Challenge Bohr s Doctrine of Classical Concepts Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 49 73 83 arXiv 1502 06547 Bibcode 2015SHPMP 49 73C doi 10 1016 j shpsb 2015 01 005 S2CID 27697360 a b Pauli Wolfgang 1994 1958 Albert Einstein and the development of physics In Enz C P von Meyenn K eds Writings on Physics and Philosophy Berlin Springer Verlag Bibcode 1994wpp book P a b c Bell John 1990 Against measurement Physics World 3 8 33 41 doi 10 1088 2058 7058 3 8 26 ISSN 2058 7058 Omnes Roland 1999 The Copenhagen Interpretation Understanding Quantum Mechanics Princeton University Press pp 41 54 doi 10 2307 j ctv173f2pm 9 S2CID 203390914 Bohr Heisenberg and Pauli recognized its main difficulties and proposed a first essential answer They often met in Copenhagen Copenhagen interpretation has not always meant the same thing to different authors I will reserve it for the doctrine held with minor differences by Bohr Heisenberg and Pauli a b c d e f g h Omnes R 1994 The Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 03669 4 OCLC 439453957 a b Chevalley Catherine 1999 Why Do We Find Bohr Obscure In Greenberger Daniel Reiter Wolfgang L Zeilinger Anton eds Epistemological and Experimental Perspectives on Quantum Physics Springer Science Business Media pp 59 74 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 1454 9 ISBN 978 9 04815 354 1 van der Waerden B L 1968 Introduction Part II Sources of Quantum Mechanics Dover ISBN 0 486 61881 1 Bernstein Jeremy 2005 Max Born and the Quantum Theory American Journal of Physics 73 11 999 1008 Bibcode 2005AmJPh 73 999B doi 10 1119 1 2060717 a b c d Howard Don 2004 Who invented the Copenhagen Interpretation A study in mythology PDF Philosophy of Science 71 5 669 682 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 164 9141 doi 10 1086 425941 JSTOR 10 1086 425941 S2CID 9454552 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 10 Dolling Lisa M Gianelli Arthur F Statile Glenn N eds 2003 Introduction The Tests of Time Readings in the Development of Physical Theory Princeton University Press pp 359 370 doi 10 2307 j ctvcm4h07 52 The generally accepted interpretation of Quantum Theory was formulated by Niels Bohr Werner Heisenberg and Wolfgang Pauli during the early part of the twentieth century at Bohr s laboratory in Copenhagen Denmark This account commonly referred to as the Copenhagen Interpretation Brush Stephen G 1980 The Chimerical Cat Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics in Historical Perspective Social Studies of Science Sage Publications Ltd 10 4 393 447 doi 10 1177 030631278001000401 JSTOR 284918 S2CID 145727731 On the other side Niels Bohr was the leading spokesman for the new movement in physics and thus it acquired the name Copenhagen Interpretation Bacciagaluppi Guido Valentini Antony 2009 10 22 Quantum Theory at the Crossroads Reconsidering the 1927 Solvay Conference Cambridge University Press p 408 ISBN 978 0 521 81421 8 This book contains a translation of the entire authorized proceedings of the 1927 Solvay conference from the original transcripts a b Bokulich Alisa 2006 Heisenberg Meets Kuhn Closed Theories and Paradigms Philosophy of Science 73 1 90 107 doi 10 1086 510176 ISSN 0031 8248 JSTOR 10 1086 510176 S2CID 170902096 Mehra J Rechenberg H 2001 The Historical Development of Quantum Theory Volume 4 Springer Verlag p 266 ISBN 9780387906423 OCLC 928788723 See for example Smith Quentin 1997 The Ontological Interpretation of the Wave Function of the Universe The Monist Oxford University Press 80 1 160 185 doi 10 5840 monist19978015 JSTOR 27903516 Since the late 1920s the orthodox interpretation was taken to be the Copenhagen Interpretation Weinberg Steven 2018 The Trouble with Quantum Mechanics Third Thoughts Harvard University Press pp 124 142 doi 10 2307 j ctvckq5b7 17 ISBN 9780674975323 JSTOR j ctvckq5b7 17 One response to this puzzle was given in the 1920s by Niels Bohr in what came to be called the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics Hanson Norwood Russell 1959 Five Cautions for the Copenhagen Interpretation s Critics Philosophy of Science The University of Chicago Press Philosophy of Science Association 26 4 325 337 doi 10 1086 287687 JSTOR 185366 S2CID 170786589 Feyerabend and Bohm are almost exclusively concerned with the inadequacies of the Bohr Interpretation which originates in Copenhagen Both understress a much less incautious view which I shall call the Copenhagen Interpretation which originates in Leipzig and presides at Gottingen Munich Cambridge Princeton and almost everywhere else too Bohm David 1952 A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of Hidden Variables I amp II Physical Review 85 2 166 193 Bibcode 1952PhRv 85 166B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 85 166 Kragh H 1999 Quantum Generations A History of Physics in the Twentieth Century Princeton University Press p 210 ISBN 978 0 691 01206 3 OCLC 450598985 In fact the term Copenhagen interpretation was not used in the 1930s but first entered the physicists vocabulary in 1955 when Heisenberg used it in criticizing certain unorthodox interpretations of quantum mechanics a b Camilleri Kristian May 2009 Constructing the Myth of the Copenhagen Interpretation Perspectives on Science 17 1 26 57 doi 10 1162 posc 2009 17 1 26 ISSN 1063 6145 S2CID 57559199 a b Heisenberg Werner 1958 Physics and Philosophy Harper I avow that the term Copenhagen interpretation is not happy since it could suggest that there are other interpretations like Bohm assumes We agree of course that the other interpretations are nonsense and I believe that this is clear in my book and in previous papers Anyway I cannot now unfortunately change the book since the printing began enough time ago Quoted in Freire Olival Jr 2005 Science and exile David Bohm the hot times of the Cold War and his struggle for a new interpretation of quantum mechanics Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences 36 1 31 35 doi 10 1525 hsps 2005 36 1 1 Rosenfeld Leon 1960 Heisenberg Physics and Philosophy Nature 186 4728 830 831 Bibcode 1960Natur 186 830R doi 10 1038 186830a0 S2CID 12979706 a b Cramer John G 1986 The Transactional Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics Reviews of Modern Physics 58 3 649 Bibcode 1986RvMP 58 647C doi 10 1103 revmodphys 58 647 Archived from the original on 2012 11 08 Maleeh Reza Amani Parisa December 2013 Pragmatism Bohr and the Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 27 4 353 367 doi 10 1080 02698595 2013 868182 ISSN 0269 8595 S2CID 170415674 Boge Florian J 2018 Quantum Mechanics Between Ontology and Epistemology Cham Springer p 2 ISBN 978 3 319 95765 4 OCLC 1086564338 Scheibe Erhard 1973 The Logical Analysis of Quantum Mechanics Pergamon Press ISBN 9780080171586 OCLC 799397091 T here is no point in looking for the Copenhagen interpretation as a unified and consistent logical structure Terms such as Copenhagen interpretation or Copenhagen school are based on the history of the development of quantum mechanics they form a simplified and often convenient way of referring to the ideas of a number of physicists who played an important role in the establishment of quantum mechanics and who were collaborators of Bohr s at his Institute or took part in the discussions during the crucial years On closer inspection one sees quite easily that these ideas are divergent in detail and that in particular the views of Bohr the spiritual leader of the school form a separate entity which can now be understood only by a thorough study of as many as possible of the relevant publications by Bohr himself Camilleri Kristian September 2007 Bohr Heisenberg and the divergent views of complementarity Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 38 3 514 528 Bibcode 2007SHPMP 38 514C doi 10 1016 j shpsb 2006 10 002 Bohr Niels 1985 May 16 1947 Kalckar Jorgen ed Niels Bohr Collected Works Vol 6 Foundations of Quantum Physics I 1926 1932 pp 451 454 a b Stenholm Stig 1983 To fathom space and time In Meystre Pierre ed Quantum Optics Experimental Gravitation and Measurement Theory Plenum Press p 121 The role of irreversibility in the theory of measurement has been emphasized by many Only this way can a permanent record be obtained The fact that separate pointer positions must be of the asymptotic nature usually associated with irreversibility has been utilized in the measurement theory of Daneri Loinger and Prosperi 1962 It has been accepted as a formal representation of Bohr s ideas by Rosenfeld 1966 Haake Fritz April 1 1993 Classical motion of meter variables in the quantum theory of measurement Physical Review A 47 4 2506 2517 Bibcode 1993PhRvA 47 2506H doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 47 2506 PMID 9909217 Peres Asher 2002 Popper s experiment and the Copenhagen interpretation Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 33 23 arXiv quant ph 9910078 Bibcode 1999quant ph 10078P doi 10 1016 S1355 2198 01 00034 X Mermin N David 1989 What s Wrong with this Pillow Physics Today 42 4 9 Bibcode 1989PhT 42d 9D doi 10 1063 1 2810963 Mermin N David 2004 Could Feynman have said this Physics Today 57 5 10 11 Bibcode 2004PhT 57e 10M doi 10 1063 1 1768652 Mermin N David 2017 01 01 Why QBism Is Not the Copenhagen Interpretation and What John Bell Might Have Thought of It In Bertlmann Reinhold Zeilinger Anton eds Quantum Un Speakables II The Frontiers Collection Springer International Publishing pp 83 93 arXiv 1409 2454 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 38987 5 4 ISBN 9783319389851 S2CID 118458259 Bohr N 1939 The Causality Problem in Atomic Physics New Theories in Physics Paris International Institute of Intellectual Co operation pp 11 30 OCLC 923465888 a b Heisenberg Werner 1971 1959 Criticism and counterproposals to the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory Physics and Philosophy the Revolution in Modern Science London George Allen amp Unwin pp 114 128 a b c Peres Asher 1998 12 01 Interpreting the Quantum World Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 29 4 611 620 arXiv quant ph 9711003 Bibcode 1997quant ph 11003P doi 10 1016 S1355 2198 98 00017 3 ISSN 1355 2198 Camilleri K 2006 Heisenberg and the wave particle duality Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 37 2 298 315 Bibcode 2006SHPMP 37 298C doi 10 1016 j shpsb 2005 08 002 Camilleri K 2009 Heisenberg and the Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics the Physicist as Philosopher Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88484 6 OCLC 638813030 Bohr N 1928 The Quantum Postulate and the Recent Development of Atomic Theory Nature 121 3050 580 590 Bibcode 1928Natur 121 580B doi 10 1038 121580a0 p 586 there can be no question of an immediate connexion with our ordinary conceptions Heisenberg W 1959 1971 Language and reality in modern physics Chapter 10 pp 145 160 in Physics and Philosophy the Revolution in Modern Science George Allen amp Unwin London ISBN 0 04 530016 X p 153 our common concepts cannot be applied to the structure of the atoms Bohr N 1928 The Quantum Postulate and the Recent Development of Atomic Theory Nature 121 3050 580 590 Bibcode 1928Natur 121 580B doi 10 1038 121580a0 p 586 In this connexion Born succeeded in obtaining a statistical interpretation of the wave functions allowing a calculation of the probability of the individual transition processes required by the quantum postulate Born M 1955 Statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics Science 122 3172 675 679 Bibcode 1955Sci 122 675B doi 10 1126 science 122 3172 675 PMID 17798674 the statistical interpretation which I have first suggested and which has been formulated in the most general way by von Neumann Born M 1953 The interpretation 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Reports 831 1 57 arXiv 1911 06282 Bibcode 2019PhR 831 1S doi 10 1016 j physrep 2019 10 001 S2CID 208006050 Jammer M 1982 Einstein and quantum physics pp 59 76 in Albert Einstein Historical and Cultural Perspectives the Centennial Symposium in Jerusalem edited by G Holton Y Elkana Princeton University Press Princeton NJ ISBN 0 691 08299 5 On pp 73 74 Jammer quotes a 1952 letter from Einstein to Besso The present quantum theory is unable to provide the description of a real state of physical facts but only of an incomplete knowledge of such Moreover the very concept of a real factual state is debarred by the orthodox theoreticians The situation arrived at corresponds almost exactly to that of the good old Bishop Berkeley Heisenberg W 1927 Uber den anschaulichen Inhalt der quantentheoretischen Kinematik und Mechanik Z Phys 43 172 198 Translation as The actual content of quantum theoretical kinematics and mechanics here Since the statistical nature of quantum theory is so closely linked to the uncertainty in all observations or perceptions one could be tempted to conclude that behind the observed statistical world a real world is hidden in which the law of causality is applicable We want to state explicitly that we believe such speculations to be both fruitless and pointless The only task of physics is to describe the relation between observations Jammer M 1982 Einstein and quantum physics pp 59 76 in Albert Einstein Historical and Cultural Perspectives the Centennial Symposium in Jerusalem edited by G Holton Y Elkana Princeton University Press Princeton NJ ISBN 0 691 08299 5 p 72 Belousek D W 1996 Einstein s 1927 unpublished hidden variable theory its background context and significance Stud Hist Phil Mod Phys 21 4 431 461 Bibcode 1996SHPMP 27 437B doi 10 1016 S1355 2198 96 00015 9 Holland P 2005 What s wrong with Einstein s 1927 hidden variable interpretation of quantum mechanics Foundations of Physics 35 2 177 196 arXiv quant ph 0401017 Bibcode 2005FoPh 35 177H doi 10 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fundamental level Claus Kiefer 2002 On the interpretation of quantum theory from Copenhagen to the present day Time p 291 arXiv quant ph 0210152 Bibcode 2003tqi conf 291K a b Haag Rudolf 2010 Some people and some problems met in half a century of commitment to mathematical physics The European Physical Journal H 35 3 263 307 Bibcode 2010EPJH 35 263H doi 10 1140 epjh e2010 10032 4 S2CID 59320730 Jaynes E T 1989 Clearing up Mysteries The Original Goal PDF Maximum Entropy and Bayesian Methods 7 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 10 Jaynes E T 1990 Probability in Quantum Theory In Zurek W H ed Complexity Entropy and the Physics of Information Addison Wesley pp 381 404 ISBN 9780201515060 OCLC 946145335 Hohenberg P C 2010 10 05 Colloquium An introduction to consistent quantum theory Reviews of Modern Physics 82 4 2835 2844 arXiv 0909 2359 Bibcode 2010RvMP 82 2835H doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 82 2835 ISSN 0034 6861 S2CID 20551033 Healey Richard 2016 Quantum Bayesian and Pragmatist Views of Quantum Theory In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University See for example van Fraassen Bas C April 2010 Rovelli s World Foundations of Physics 40 4 390 417 Bibcode 2010FoPh 40 390V doi 10 1007 s10701 009 9326 5 ISSN 0015 9018 S2CID 17217776 Prescod Weinstein Chanda 2021 07 07 No man is an island the early days of the quantum revolution Physics World Retrieved 2022 02 03 In short the relational interpretation insists that the quantum state of a system depends on the observer and it is a concept that Rovelli has helped to formalize and convert into an area of active research Becker Kate 2013 01 25 Quantum physics has been rankling scientists for decades Boulder Daily Camera Retrieved 2013 01 25 Goldstein Sheldon 2017 Bohmian Mechanics Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Kastner R E May 2010 The Quantum Liar Experiment in Cramer s transactional interpretation Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 41 2 86 92 arXiv 0906 1626 Bibcode 2010SHPMP 41 86K doi 10 1016 j shpsb 2010 01 001 S2CID 16242184 Gleick James 1992 Genius The Life and Science of Richard Feynman Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 679 74704 8 OCLC 223830601 Wheeler John Archibald 1977 Include the observer in the wave function In Lopes J Leite Paty M eds Quantum Mechanics A Half Century Later D Reidel Publishing Byrne Peter 2012 The Many Worlds of Hugh Everett III Multiple Universes Mutual Assured Destruction and the Meltdown of a Nuclear Family Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 199 55227 6 OCLC 809554486 Wheeler John Archibald 2000 12 12 A Practical Tool But Puzzling Too New York Times Retrieved 2020 12 25 Fuchs Christopher A 2018 Copenhagen Interpretation Delenda Est American Journal of Physics 87 4 317 318 arXiv 1809 05147 Bibcode 2018arXiv180905147F doi 10 1119 1 5089208 S2CID 224755562 Zeilinger Anton 1999 A foundational principle for quantum mechanics Foundations of Physics 29 4 631 643 doi 10 1023 A 1018820410908 S2CID 16514757 Suffice it to say here that in my view the principle naturally supports and extends the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics It is evident that one of the immediate consequences is that in physics we cannot talk about reality independent of what can be said about reality Likewise it does not make sense to reduce the task of physics to just making subjective statements because any statements about the physical world must ultimately be subject to experiment Therefore while in a classical worldview reality is a primary concept prior to and independent of observation with all its properties in the emerging view of quantum mechanics the notions of reality and of information are on an equal footing One implies the other and neither one is sufficient to obtain a complete understanding of the world Further reading EditFolse H Faye J eds 2017 Niels Bohr and the Philosophy of Physics London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 350 03511 9 OCLC 1006344483 van der Waerden B L ed 2007 Sources of Quantum Mechanics Dover ISBN 978 0 486 45892 2 OCLC 920280519 Fine Arthur 1986 The Shaky Game Einstein Realism and the Quantum Theory University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 24946 9 OCLC 988425945 Wheeler J A Zurek W H eds 1983 Quantum Theory and Measurement Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 08316 2 OCLC 865311103 Petersen A 1968 Quantum Physics and the Philosophical Tradition MIT Press OCLC 43596 Petersen A 1963 The Philosophy of Niels Bohr Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 19 7 8 14 Bibcode 1963BuAtS 19g 8P doi 10 1080 00963402 1963 11454520 Margeneau H 1950 The Nature of Physical Reality McGraw Hill OCLC 874550860 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Copenhagen interpretation amp oldid 1126177394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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