What Is Surprising About Wave Function Collapse?

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of wave function collapse in quantum mechanics and the idea that an external observer is needed to determine when a measurement outcome is seen. This leads to the problem of "measurement problem" and the fact that the theory only predicts probabilities of observation results. The conversation also touches on the double slit experiment and the idea that particles do not have a position until they are measured. The conversation ends with a discussion on the difficulties of understanding quantum mechanics and the need to let go of classical beliefs.
  • #1
abrogard
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3
Excuse my ignorance. I've been googling trying to understand but they always seem to just state it without explaining why.

They say the electron could be anywhere within this area of probability but we don't know why until we look and then the wave function 'collapses' and we know where it is.

And that's a big surprise. A big 'strangeness'. Evidence of the 'weirdness' of the quantum world.

Why?

Because until we looked it wasn't there?

Or because until then we didn't know where it was?

I see nothing surprising about either of those two. If it's moving it is not there until it is there.

And of course we don't know where it is until we look.

You don't know where I am until you look.

I've obviously got a completely naive understanding of what they're trying to say. Can someone please shatter my naivete?
 
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  • #2
In quantum mechanics, there are two rules for time evolution. One is deterministic and goverend by Schroedinger's equation, and the other is random and is called collapse. They are not contradictory because they apply at different times. However, who decides which rule is applied when? Apparently, an external observer is needed to decide when a measurement outcome is seen, and the random collapse occurs. This is fine in practice, since we always know when we get a measurement result. But it is unsatisfactory that our theory of physics doesn't seem to make sense when applied to the whole universe, since there is no external observer of the universe. This is the problem of collapse or the "measurement problem".
 
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  • #3
All this is interpretation dependant. The formalism, that is the math without any interpretation or a very minimal one, says QM is a theory about observations that appear here in an assumed common-sense classical world. What's going on when not observed the theory is silent about. Its that silent bit that to a large extent interpretations want to elucidate.

The other thing about the theory is only probabilities of the results of observations are predicted. And those probabilities are a generalisation of ordinary probability theory:
http://www.scottaaronson.com/democritus/lec9.html

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #4
abrogard said:
And of course we don't know where it is until we look.
You don't know where I am until you look.

You are describing it as if the the electron is always somewhere and it's just that we don't know where until we look. If that were what was going on, it wouldn't be at all surprising at all - we all know people who have this problem with their car keys every day.

But orthodox quantum mechanics says something different. It says that the until the electron position is measured, it has no position... not "it has a position but we don't know what it is", but rather that there is no position unless we measure, the same way that I don't have a lap unless I'm sitting down. Have you looked at the double slit experiment for electrons? If not, google will find you plenty of pointers.
 
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  • #5
I am still considering, with the help of some googling atyy's response.

bhobby also has me thinking and studying - his link seems to indicate clearly quantum mechanics belongs to another realm, not observable reality, not maths, but a third place.

I certainly had not thought orthodox quantum mechanics said the electron has no position and cannot currently see how that can be. It describes an area of probabilities, does it not? Well surely a thing must 'be' in the first instance to have a probability of 'being' here or there?

Yes I've seen the double slit experiment numerous times and listened to and read numerous descriptions/explanations of it. And I think I've seen reputable physicists dogmatically state 'it is a particle' and 'it is a wave' - i.e. the two of them contradicting each other.

It all leaves me not knowing. It doesnt' solve anything for me. I get the impression no physicist expects it to, I frequently get the impression they show us this experiment in order to induce a state of bewilderment. In fact they virtually say as much, don't they?

I do have a query arising from that, though. Why isn't the particle wave question easily decided on the basis of waves propagating out from source in spherical fashion, whereas particles propagate out like bullets?

But I don't wish to complicate this thread. I've asked a simple question and am happy to stay with that until I've arrived at some 'answer' that will satisfy me.
 
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  • #6
abrogard said:
I've asked a simple question and am happy to stay with that until I've arrived at some 'answer' that will satisfy me.
Hmm, you might be here a long time. :)
I agree though. The wierdness of quantum mechanics is not very obvious if you are just measuring the position of a single particle.
 
  • #7
abrogard said:
It all leaves me not knowing. It doesnt' solve anything for me. I get the impression no physicist expects it to, I frequently get the impression they show us this experiment in order to induce a state of bewilderment. In fact they virtually say as much, don't they?

We have met the enemy and he is us - Pogo. The quantum world is not part of everyday experience. It requires a different mindset.

abrogard said:
I do have a query arising from that, though. Why isn't the particle wave question easily decided on the basis of waves propagating out from source in spherical fashion, whereas particles propagate out like bullets?

This wave particle stuff, while common in popularisations and beginner texts, isn't really correct and is not part of more advanced treatments:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0609163v2.pdf

Here is a treatment of the double slit from the more advanced perspective:
http://arxiv.org/ftp/quant-ph/papers/0703/0703126.pdf

abrogard said:
But I don't wish to complicate this thread. I've asked a simple question and am happy to stay with that until I've arrived at some 'answer' that will satisfy me.

In my experience until you let go of ingrained classical beliefs that may prove elusive.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #8
This wave particle stuff said:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0609163v2.pdf[/URL]
Bill

I have just opened the above link and read the intro. It looks very promising to me indeed, looks like something targeted at such as myself. Excellent.

Causes me to ask one little question if I may before I even read it though.

In the light of all that first para - the 'abstract' - says what is it exactly that IS generally accepted and proven about quantum mechanics that causes numerous populisers of the science to claim it is 'The most successful theory ever devised.' ?

Tried and tested to numerous orders of precision. Making predictions to the same astounding accuracy.

What is that then? Some set of maths? That does what exactly? Predicts particle decay products? Just what? I am totally in the dark as to what it might be. That was my best guess just then. There must be a big difference between it and all the things mentioned in that introductory abstract, obviously, if they are so much debated, contested, disputed.

Do I make my question clear? I'm bad at that. I'm just asking what is this great strength and indisputable truth and fact and science that is employed every day and works so well if it is not all those things - those things being the very things that are generally presented to the general public such as myself continually as being, in fact, 'quantum science' or 'quantum mechanics' itself.

No wonder we're so confused if we're told on the one hand this thing is IT and on the other hand that same thing is widely disputed.

:)

p.s. Edit. Perhaps I should have waited a little. Maybe the first para of the actual intro is the answer I'm looking for:

quote:
On the technical level, quantum mechanics (QM) is a set of mathematically formulated
prescriptions that serve for calculations of probabilities of different measurement outcomes.
The calculated probabilities agree with experiments.
unquote:

Is that it? 'mathematically formulated prescriptions for calculations of probabilities' ?
 
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  • #9
abrogard said:
What is that then? Some set of maths? That does what exactly? Predicts particle decay products? Just what?

Everything at the level of the very small is explained by QM - everything without fail. That includes how transistors work, the very strange behaviour of liquid helium, otherwise inexplicable phenomena like black body radiation, even why solidity itself exists - the list goes on. It has done everything that has been asked of it. Even things like its unification with general relativity you may have read where it failed has recently been shown to not be the issue it was once thought:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1209.3511

The accuracy thing is most likely referring to QED which has been tested to breathtaking accuracy:
http://scienceblogs.com/principles/2011/05/05/the-most-precisely-tested-theo/

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #10
abrogard said:
I am still considering, with the help of some googling atyy's response.

bhobby also has me thinking and studying - his link seems to indicate clearly quantum mechanics belongs to another realm, not observable reality, not maths, but a third place.

I certainly had not thought orthodox quantum mechanics said the electron has no position and cannot currently see how that can be. It describes an area of probabilities, does it not? Well surely a thing must 'be' in the first instance to have a probability of 'being' here or there?

Yes I've seen the double slit experiment numerous times and listened to and read numerous descriptions/explanations of it. And I think I've seen reputable physicists dogmatically state 'it is a particle' and 'it is a wave' - i.e. the two of them contradicting each other.

It all leaves me not knowing. It doesnt' solve anything for me. I get the impression no physicist expects it to, I frequently get the impression they show us this experiment in order to induce a state of bewilderment. In fact they virtually say as much, don't they?

I do have a query arising from that, though. Why isn't the particle wave question easily decided on the basis of waves propagating out from source in spherical fashion, whereas particles propagate out like bullets?

But I don't wish to complicate this thread. I've asked a simple question and am happy to stay with that until I've arrived at some 'answer' that will satisfy me.

The wave particle duality is not a problem. All physicists agree quantum mechanics is a perfectly coherent theory.

The disagreement is: is quantum mechanics potentially complete, or does the fact that we have difficulties using only the deterministic evolution of the wave function to describe the whole universe indicate that quantum mechanics is incomplete?

In general, we don't expect our theories to be complete, and we expect that more experiments will show our current best theories to be wrong in some way. But in many cases, experiment is essential for showing our theories to be incomplete. The question in quantum mechanics is: is there an indication, even before any experiments prove quantum mechanics to be wrong, that quantum mechanics itself indicates that it is incomplete?
 
  • #11
Just to answer the question in the title of this thread: The only surprising thing about collapse is that it still is thought as being necessary to use quantum theory as a physicist. Everything else is subject to "interpretation" beyond the "minimal interpretation", and that's just a matter of taste, what you like to believe, but it has little to do with physics (but this is also, of course, a personal opinion) ;-)).
 
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  • #12
vanhees71 said:
Just to answer the question in the title of this thread: The only surprising thing about collapse is that it still is thought as being necessary to use quantum theory as a physicist. Everything else is subject to "interpretation" beyond the "minimal interpretation", and that's just a matter of taste, what you like to believe, but it has little to do with physics (but this is also, of course, a personal opinion) ;-)).

I should stress the vanhees71 uses "collapse" to mean "physical collapse", whatever that means. The standard usage of the term collapse is not what vanhees71 is talking about. In the standard usage, the wave function and collapse are not necessarily physical, so "physical collapse" is not defined.

Collapse in the standard usage is a standard part of quantum mechanics. The idea of physical collapse usually refers to approaches like GRW or CSL, which are not standard quantum mechanics and predict deviations from standard quantum mechanics.
 
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  • #13
My personal intuition about collapse under measurement is that QM' standard interpretation claims to separate the system from the measurement apparatus but this is just a first approximation. If an atom's electron is used to measure a photon (through photo excitation) is really the atom which measures the photon, or is the opposite, or both things? What makes a measurement apparatus a macroscopic, instead of a microscopic one? I believe something is still missing here about what phisically is a measurement. I'm not learned in all the concepts as decoherence theory, etc, but we have to explore the problem further, in my opinion.

--
lightarrow
 
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  • #14
If collapse is not meant to be physical, you don't need to introduce it in the first place. At least I have no use for it whatsoever. Then it's simply the update of knowledge of an observer due to a measurement.
 
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  • #15
abrogard said:
Is that it? 'mathematically formulated prescriptions for calculations of probabilities' ?
Yes, that's what QM is about, if we concentrate only on non-controversial aspects with an undeniable success.
 
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  • #16
vanhees71 said:
If collapse is not meant to be physical, you don't need to introduce it in the first place. At least I have no use for it whatsoever. Then it's simply the update of knowledge of an observer due to a measurement.

But you do need to update the knowledge of an observer in order to calculate a conditional probability. So you do need collapse.

In the standard interpretation, collapse is updating the knowledge of an observer. The standard interpretation is agnostic as to whether it is physical or not. This is the position of Cohen-Tannoudji, Diu and Laloe's textbook.
 
  • #17
Sigh. Why do you want to call it collapse instead of just stating that you calculate a conditional probability? The word "collapse" is loaden with so much metaphysical balast (where Bohr and particularly Heisenberg are the main culprits ;-)) that I try to avoid it whenever I can!
 
  • #18
vanhees71 said:
Sigh. Why do you want to call it collapse instead of just stating that you calculate a conditional probability? The word "collapse" is loaden with so much metaphysical balast (where Bohr and particularly Heisenberg are the main culprits ;-)) that I try to avoid it whenever I can!

Then it's just terminology, which is pointless to argue about. The important point here is that an ingredient beyond the Born rule and Kolmogorov's axioms is needed, and it is good to have a handy name like collapse or if one is more formal one can use "state reduction".
 
  • #19
I precisely deny that there's "something" necessary beyond Born's rule and Kolmogorov's axioms to make sense of quantum theory as a physical model of the real world. Which "something" should that be, however you call it.
 
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  • #20
vanhees71 said:
I precisely deny that there's "something" necessary beyond Born's rule and Kolmogorov's axioms to make sense of quantum theory as a physical model of the real world. Which "something" should that be, however you call it.

That's great! I'm glad we haven't been having a pointless terminology discussion. So can collapse be derived from the Born rule and Kolmogorov's axioms?

I have an argument that it cannot. In the most general form of collapse, the rule of collapse is not unique, even for a given observable. It must be calibrated according to the measuring apparatus. So one at least needs a postulate beyond the Born rule and Kolmogorov's axioms to derive the rule of collapse.
 
  • #22
andresB said:
and you will see that the collapse is not so simple.

If collapse is simple or not, or even exists, is very interpretation dependant. One can not make generalisations.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #23
vanhees71 said:
If collapse is not meant to be physical, you don't need to introduce it in the first place. At least I have no use for it whatsoever. Then it's simply the update of knowledge of an observer due to a measurement.
I need a clarification here: a "measurement" is intended only as a physical act or not? This "update of knowledge" happens even in other cases or just in the case of a measurement?
Thanks.

--
lightarrow
 
  • #24
QM founders highlighted that there is no QM without classical Mechanics. Classical Mechanics is about a word where we neglect microscopic details. You have heat pressure, mean values and probabilities. The is no Schrodinger cat in this word. But you have to use CM to describe the apparatus in a laboratory, its environment and so on.
So we need a frontier. The problem is not to find where this frontier is: You put it where you want! It may include an observer who looks at the apparatus.
This frontier has to be seen as a boudary in space time. You can choose it to wrap only the particle between two moments or the whole laboratory between 2014 and 2015.
Once you have this frontier QM tells you that this boudary is a black box. Not a black hole but not so far. Inside the box you have amplitudes of probabilities that you have to sum Outside you have probabilities. Inside you have Schrodinger equation outside you have
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffusion_equation
The is no collapse in QM. Seen from the outside QM has given a probability to the boundary that YOU hav chosen. I think that the question of when did the collapse occurred has no sense.
Collapse is an interpretation of QM for observers who live in a classical word where there is no amplitudes to collapse.
 
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  • #25
vanhees71 said:
If collapse is not meant to be physical, you don't need to introduce it in the first place. At least I have no use for it whatsoever. Then it's simply the update of knowledge of an observer due to a measurement.

I think that this updating is the same thing as collapse. Of course, if the wave function is viewed as expressing our subjective knowledge about the true state of the system, then such a collapse is unremarkable, but I don't see how that interpretation is viable, given Bell's theorem.
 
  • #26
It's not subjective precisely because of Bell's theorem. Why should it be? For me quantum theory is a mathematical concept to predict probabilities for the outcome of measurements given a state defined by a preparation procedure of the system under study. Thus doing a measurement is always a random experiment in the sense of probability theory. Whether there is some other theory that is as successful as QT in describing matter on a microscopic level and at the same time deterministic, we don't know. At least, so far there is none known. To realize the value of a measured observable in a random experiment is just this recognition of this outcome, but nothing on the system's state collapses. It's not even clear to the collapse proponents, when this process might happen. Is it enough that a measurement apparatus stores the result somehow or does one need a "conscious" being to "collapse the state"? If so, what's "consciousness"? To ask like Bell: "Is an amoeba enough to collapse the state?" To me collapse is totally superfluous, leading to severe conceptional problems rather than contributing to our understanding of Nature.
 
  • #27
In the "consistent histories" interpretation of QM, instead of thinking of the wave function as giving probabilities for what's true NOW, you can instead think of the wave function, together with its evolution equations as giving a probability distribution for complete histories of the universe. With that interpretation, the "updating" following a measurement is exactly the updating that happens in classical probability when you acquire new knowledge.

The down side of this way of looking at it, it seems to me, is the following two thorny issues:
  1. To interpret QM as a probabilistic theory on histories, you have to make a choice as to which set of distinguishable histories you're choosing from. This seems subjective, although maybe decoherence helps to give you a preferred set.
  2. Viewing QM this way is actually equivalent to a hidden-variables theory, in which the "hidden variable" is which possible history is the "real" one. But as a hidden-variables theory, it's nonlocal.
 
  • #28
vanhees71 said:
It's not subjective precisely because of Bell's theorem. Why should it be?

If it's not subjective, then it's physical, so the updating is a change in a physical quantity.

For me quantum theory is a mathematical concept to predict probabilities for the outcome of measurements given a state defined by a preparation procedure of the system under study.

If a measurement is a physical interaction like any other, then what makes a measurement result have a definite outcome, when something like "the z-component of the spin of an electron" need not have a definite outcome (that is, an electron can be in a state that has no definite value for that quantity)?
 
  • #29
A measurement has a definite outcome because you constructed your measurement apparatus to give you one.

More complicated is the question whether the probabilities of QT are "objective" or "subjective". First of all one has to define the meaning of these words. For me the statement that probabilities are "subjective" is describing a situation, where you use probabilistic descriptions, because you have incomplete knowledge, as in classical statistical mechanics. You don't know the location and momentum of any gas molecule in a container of an equilibrated gas but describe it by some "coarse-grained observables" giving you the relevant description as a macroscopic system like pressure, density, internal energy, temperature, and so on. According to the classical theory in principle each molecule has a determined position and momentum (and perhaps also some orientation if not monatomic). Within classical physics all probabilities are subjective.

In quantum theory, however you have a different kind of probabilities, because within quantum theory you cannot prepare a system to have determined values for all observables, and thus a pure state, representing the complete possible knowledge about the system, leads only to probabilistic statements. Even for one particle, it's not possible to determine its position and momentum precisely at the same time (Heisenberg uncertainty relation), but you describe its position's and momentum's (and any other observable's) probability distribution (or probabilities for discrete quantities like spin components etc.) by it. The state, however, is uniquely defined by (an equavalence class) of preparation procedures, and you cannot gain more information about the system (within the realm of quantum theory). Bell's theorem tells us that, if there is a deterministic theory, where these irreducible quantum probabilities are "subjective" in the above stated sense, it must be a (I suppose very complicated) non-local deterministic theory, and so far we don't have such a theory nor do we have any glimpse that such a theory might exist or is consistently stateable at all.
 
  • #30
vanhees71 said:
To realize the value of a measured observable in a random experiment is just this recognition of this outcome, but nothing on the system's state collapses. It's not even clear to the collapse proponents, when this process might happen. Is it enough that a measurement apparatus stores the result somehow or does one need a "conscious" being to "collapse the state"? If so, what's "consciousness"? To ask like Bell: "Is an amoeba enough to collapse the state?" To me collapse is totally superfluous, leading to severe conceptional problems rather than contributing to our understanding of Nature.

Does removing collapse solve this problem? You still need an observer to say when an observation occurs (ie. when do you apply the Born rule), or you need something extra beyond standard quantum theory.
 
  • #31
Well thanks for all that. I'm probably interjecting at this point - you're all busy talking esoteric details amongst yourselves. I am out of my depth in the maths and in the general consideration, being untutored in both. The maths isn't so important to me because I can take it on faith.

But the lack of general understanding is more of a stumbling block because that means I can't even follow the thread.

But I'm getting something out of it all. I set off in one direction following one link and then get led to others, and others, and others...

If I track them all down and eventually get to understand them all I'll become an expert of quantum physics of some sort. Never going to happen. Couldn't, wouldn't and not what I aspire to either.

It is now probably time for me to go away and devote myself to all that reading and trying to understand. But before I do I'll record what I understand so far:

The surprising thing about the 'collapse' of the wave function is that the prevailing view is that the particle simply doesn't exist. It is not seen as a probability of it being here or there. It is seen simply as 'a probability', a 'non-thing', a 'potential thing' that springs into being when we go to measure the location of the 'thing' that has recently disappeared.

That explains that.

Tangential or flowing on or allied with that or whatever I've discovered that a particle is a wave and a wave is a particle, apparently. And coincidentally saw in a recent New Scientist I think it was, the first ever photograph (!) of this 'wavicle' http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/feed/6344892/podcast.xml

That's about all I 'know' right now. I've come across a whole range of claims/theories and tried to store them all on my pc and unfortunately mislaid nearly all of them right now - tucked away on some hard drive in some dir somewhere, in some guise or other, pdf, youtube vid, html, I don't know, I'm fairly chaotic obviously.

Some claiming the whole quantum thing is proof that consciousness is the be all and end all. Another man claiming to prove that the whole thing is absurd and based on false premises. Another claiming Einstein and others made basic mistakes in their maths with the Lorentz contraction formula in the very early days. It has led me over to the Big Bang debate where there's a man claiming the whole Hubble doppler shift thing is a mistake and the missing dark matter is simply H2 and the red shift is due to ( I think ) magnetic fields in the vastness of space, something like that...

Fascinating. Bewildering and fascinating.

I note much of what I read is dated and I wonder what today's consensus is regarding all these questions.

If it is known where there is perhaps a sort of 'news sheet' or something that gives details of the current prevailing wisdom on these matters I'd like to know about it for I've been unable to find it.
 
  • #32
abrogard said:
The surprising thing about the 'collapse' of the wave function is that the prevailing view is that the particle simply doesn't exist. It is not seen as a probability of it being here or there. It is seen simply as 'a probability', a 'non-thing', a 'potential thing' that springs into being when we go to measure the location of the 'thing' that has recently disappeared.

Yes, exactly. So since probability refers to things that do exist but about which we have incomplete knowledge, we use different words to describe the 'non-thing' like "quantum state" (very correct) or "wave function" (informal, but in context most people understand that you mean the quantum state). The closes term that is used to distinguish the quantum state from normal probability is "probability amplitude" (slighht incorrect use of a formal term, but again, people usually understand from context).
 
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  • #33
abrogard said:
The surprising thing about the 'collapse' of the wave function is that the prevailing view is that the particle simply doesn't exist. It is not seen as a probability of it being here or there. It is seen simply as 'a probability', a 'non-thing', a 'potential thing' that springs into being when we go to measure the location of the 'thing' that has recently disappeared.

Actually its silent on such things - we have interpretations where its a very real particle.

abrogard said:
Some claiming the whole quantum thing is proof that consciousness is the be all and end all. Another man claiming to prove that the whole thing is absurd and based on false premises. Another claiming Einstein and others made basic mistakes in their maths with the Lorentz contraction formula in the very early days

Most of the above is crank rot. For example I have engaged that Lorentz contraction guy - he is an idiot. We now understand relativity a lot better than when Einstein wrote his famous paper eg:
http://www2.physics.umd.edu/~yakovenk/teaching/Lorentz.pdf

Even if Einstein made a mistake, he didn't, but assuming he did, proofs like the above are entirely independent of it. All of them needed to have an error - that's about as likely as 2+2 is not 4 because everyone made a mistake and didn't spot it.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #34
vanhees71 said:
A measurement has a definite outcome because you constructed your measurement apparatus to give you one.

How does one construct a system so as to have a definite outcome?
 
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  • #35
atyy said:
Does removing collapse solve this problem? You still need an observer to say when an observation occurs (ie. when do you apply the Born rule), or you need something extra beyond standard quantum theory.

I agree. To me, the "minimalist interpretation", which makes the minimal ontological commitment ends up defacto giving special status to certain variables, namely the macroscopic results of measurements. Since presumably measurements are interactions like any other, describable by QM, that seems ad hoc to me, if not inconsistent.

Conceptually, it almost works to divide the world into macroscopic versus microscopic, and to view QM (and the microscopic world) as just a peculiar way of computing probabilities for the evolution of the macroscopic world. But it doesn't really make sense to divide it like that, because there is no principled cutoff for something being macroscopic. Dividing it by measurement versus everything else seems even more ad hoc than macro versus micro.
 
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