On the Origin of Quantum Uncertainty
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2005.07325v3
- Date: Fri, 23 Feb 2024 19:22:24 GMT
- Title: On the Origin of Quantum Uncertainty
- Authors: Christoph Adami (Michigan State University)
- Abstract summary: I propose that quantum uncertainty is a manifestation of the indeterminism inherent in mathematical logic.
I show that the joint state of such a pair is determined, while the state of the individual machine is not, precisely as in quantum measurement.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The origin of the uncertainty inherent in quantum measurements has been
discussed since quantum theory's inception, but to date the source of the
indeterminacy of measurements performed at an angle with respect to a quantum
state's preparation is unknown. Here I propose that quantum uncertainty is a
manifestation of the indeterminism inherent in mathematical logic. By
explicitly constructing pairs of classical Turing machines that write into each
others' program space, I show that the joint state of such a pair is
determined, while the state of the individual machine is not, precisely as in
quantum measurement. In particular, the eigenstates of the individual machines
appear to be superpositions of classical states, albeit with vanishing
eigenvalue. Because these "classically entangled" Turing machines essentially
implement undecidable "halting problems", this construction suggests that the
inevitable randomness that results when interrogating such machines about their
state is precisely the randomness inherent in the bits of Chaitin's halting
probability. Because this classical construction mirrors quantum measurement, I
argue that quantum uncertainty has the same origin.
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