wipeout said:DrChinese,
I believe it was that both hidden variables against quantum theory and also seperability of particle properties that were shown to be false by the Aspect experiment.
I don't believe that decoherent/consistent histories is saying the world is in any way classical, only that the result is like it was.
As far as I know, the act of observation has problems with cosmology as there is nothing to observe the universes wavefunction of Stephen Hawking and Jim Hartle. It's no coincidence that Hartle has been one of the four main people involved in the development of a version of quantum theory that removes this problem.
How it gets there involves decoherence and a many-worlds'-like "many-histories" view of particles that sounds a bit like Richard Feynman's sum-over-histories version. I clearly have no idea how it all works yet or I'd obviously be giving a better explanation.
I'm still going to try and find the least weird one, even if they all come up with the same practical result anyway.
I just don't like paradoxes much.![]()
Of course, the only "paradox" is that reality isn't like we imagine it to be. At any rate, the Aspect experiments ruled out what are known as local realistic theories. That leaves non-local realistic theories (a la Bohm) and local non-realistic (i.e. no hidden variables) theories. Of these, there is the standard (Copenhagen) interpretation, the many worlds interpretation (Everett) and I guess the stuff from Griffiths of which I am not familiar. At this time, none of these classes of theories makes any different predictions than the others to my knowledge.
