- #176
- 8,943
- 2,949
vanhees71 said:This is a bit too short an answer to be convincing. Why is choosing a subsystem of the universe the classical/quantum cut? Matter as we know it cannot be described completely by classical physics at all. So how can just taking a lump of matter as the choice of a subsystem define a classical/quantum cut?
Well, I'm not sure that the cut needs to be classical/quantum, but in order to compare theory with experiment, there needs to be such a thing as "the outcome of an experiment". The theory predicts that you have a probability of [itex]P[/itex] of getting outcome [itex]O[/itex], then it has to be possible to get a definite outcome in order to compile statistics and compare with the theoretical prediction. But for the subsystem described by quantum mechanics, there are no definite outcomes. The system is described by superpositions such as [itex]\alpha |\psi_1\rangle + \beta |\psi_2\rangle[/itex]. So it seems to me that we distinguish between the system under study, which we treat as evolving continuously according to Schrodinger's equation, and the apparatus/detector/observer, which we treat as having definite (although nondeterministic) outcomes. That's the split that is sometimes referred to as the classical/quantum split, and it seems that something like it is necessary in interpreting quantum mechanics as a probabilistic theory.