- #386
jbergman
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I agree. Which is why I made my emperor's new clothes comment vis a vis interpretations. This "stochastic approach" looks to me like nothing more than dressing up the typical QM evolution.JC_Silver said:Is that demanded by the math? Because I understand that this is the conclusion given on the paper, but when I look at the math used the only thing I gather is that in between division 1 and division 2 the particle is unknowable and trying to predict its properties gives us all of QM weirdness.
I don't see why a regular particle with definite positions wouldn't be able to be describe by regular statistics.
By saying it can't be known by any means tells me this is different from classical physics, the particle is doing something weird where classical statistics break down and we are not allowed to look.
The math only says that between two divisions the particle's states are fundamentally unknowable, that is the superposition.
This is what confuses me, to me the math doesn't seem to demand that the particle have definite values, it demands that its state be unknowable.