A review and analysis of six extended Wigner's friend arguments
The Wigner's friend thought experiment was intended to illustrate the difficulty one has in describing an agent as a quantum system when that agent performs a measurement. While it does pose a challenge to the orthodox interpretation of quantum theory, most modern interpretations have no troubl...
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Zusammenfassung: | The Wigner's friend thought experiment was intended to illustrate the
difficulty one has in describing an agent as a quantum system when that agent
performs a measurement. While it does pose a challenge to the orthodox
interpretation of quantum theory, most modern interpretations have no trouble
in resolving the difficulty. Recently, a number of extensions of Wigner's ideas
have been proposed. We provide a gentle introduction to six such arguments,
modifying the specifics of many of them so that they are as simple and unified
as possible. In particular, we show that all of the arguments hinge on
assumptions about correlations between measurement outcomes that are not
accessible to any observer, even in principle. We then provide a critical
analysis of each argument, focusing especially on how well one can motivate the
required assumptions regarding these inaccessible correlations. Although we
argue that some of these assumptions are not entirely well-motivated, all of
the arguments do shed light on the nature of quantum theory, especially when
concerning the description of agents and their measurements. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2308.16220 |