arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:hep-th/9403015AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

On Quantum Mechanics

Carlo Rovelli

Published 1994-03-02Version 1

We reformulate the problem of the "interpretation of quantum mechanics" as the problem of DERIVING the quantum mechanical formalism from a set of simple physical postulates. We suggest that the common unease with taking quantum mechanics as a fundamental description of nature could derive from the use of an incorrect notion, as the unease with the Lorentz transformations before Einstein derived from the notion of observer independent time. Following an an analysis of the measurement process as seen by different observers, we propose a reformulation of quantum mechanics in terms of INFORMATION THEORY. We propose three different postulates out of which the formalism of the theory can be reconstructed; these are based on the notion of information about each other that systems contain. All systems are assumed to be equivalent: no observer-observed distinction, and information is interpreted as correlation. We then suggest that the incorrect notion that generates the unease with quantum mechanichs is the notion of OBSERVER INDEPENDENT state of a system.

Comments: uuencoded PostScript file, 42 pages
Categories: hep-th, gr-qc
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1109.2794 [hep-th] (Published 2011-09-13, updated 2012-05-06)
On entropic gravity: the entropy postulate, entropy content of screens and relation to quantum mechanics
arXiv:hep-th/9804036 (Published 1998-04-04)
Quantum Mechanics as a Gauge Theory of Metaplectic Spinor Fields
arXiv:hep-th/9405042 (Published 1994-05-09)
How Interference Effects in Mixtures Determine the Rules of Quantum Mechanics