pmb_phy said:
Regarding "at the same time" - Operationally, when this phrase is used it means that two measurements are carried out in rapid succession. If the observables are incompatible then measurement of one of the observables changes the state of the system so that it is no longer in a state corresponding to the state it was left in by the preceding measurement. I would imagine that what I just said is unclear. I'm having a hard time finding the words to describe what I mean. Let me get back to you on this.
I wrote most of this reply before you posted this, so some of what I'm saying overlaps with what you just said. I decided to try to explain why it doesn't make sense to say that it's possible to measure two incompatible observables at the same time:
Suppose that you measure an observable A. This will put the system in an eigenstate of A, and the system can now be said to have a well-defined value of A (the eigenvalue corresponding to that eigenstate). Suppose that you immediately after that measure a second observable B, that commutes with A. This will put the system in a state that's an eigenstate of
both A and B. (This is approximately true when the time between measurements is short, and it's exact in the limit when that time goes to zero. It's also exact for finite times if A also commutes with the Hamiltonian).
In this case, it makes
some sense to say that we have measured A and B at the same time. Even though the measurements weren't performed at exactly the same time, we have performed two measurements that have given the system well-defined values of both A and B at one moment in time.
If A and B
don't commute. There's nothing that can possibly happen that we can describe as "measuring both values at the same time". The measurement of B will change the state so that it's no longer an eigenstate of A, so both observables will never have well-defined values at the same time.
OK, that was the part I wrote before you posted #16. A few more comments:
Yes, I have studied this stuff at the university, so you don't have to worry about my background.

I don't have any problems following
this for example.
According to what I wrote above, it makes sense to say that we can measure two observables at the same time, if and only if the observables commute, and since they do that if and only if the right hand side of the (uncertainty principle) inequality is zero, I think it
does make sense to say that the uncertainty principle is about "not being able to measure two incompatible observables at the same time".
But I agree of course that the uncertainty principle is much more than that. I have tried to emphasize that in all my posts in this thread.
pmb_phy said:
Only statistically is there an uncertainy, i.e. when succesive measurements are excecuted on systems which are identically prepared.
OK, I think this explains what you had in mind when you said that you can measure two incompatible observables at the same time. It sounded like a really strange claim to me. You're doing your simultaneous measurements on two different members of an ensemble of systems that are all in the exact same quantum state. Yes, I agree you can do
that.
