| Literature DB >> 33265385 |
Abstract
One of the basic assumptions underlying Bell's theorem is the causal arrow of time, having to do with temporal order rather than spatial separation. Nonetheless, the physical assumptions regarding causality are seldom studied in this context, and often even go unmentioned, in stark contrast with the many different possible locality conditions which have been studied and elaborated upon. In the present work, some retrocausal toy-models which reproduce the predictions of quantum mechanics for Bell-type correlations are reviewed. It is pointed out that a certain toy-model which is ostensibly superdeterministic-based on denying the free-variable status of some of quantum mechanics' input parameters-actually contains within it a complete retrocausal toy-model. Occam's razor thus indicates that the superdeterministic point of view is superfluous. A challenge is to generalize the retrocausal toy-models to a full theory-a reformulation of quantum mechanics-in which the standard causal arrow of time would be replaced by a more lenient one: an arrow of time applicable only to macroscopically-available information. In discussing such a reformulation, one finds that many of the perplexing features of quantum mechanics could arise naturally, especially in the context of stochastic theories.Entities:
Keywords: Bell’s theorem; retrocausality; superdeterminism; the causal arrow of time; toy-models
Year: 2018 PMID: 33265385 PMCID: PMC7512812 DOI: 10.3390/e20040294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Entropy (Basel) ISSN: 1099-4300 Impact factor: 2.524
Figure 1Sketch of a spacetime region permeated by fluctuating fields, with an external perturbation applied at times near , and with the field configuration at an early time, , fixed as initial conditions. If the fields are described by a deterministic theory, the field configurations before are unaffected by the external perturbation; in contrast, for stochastic theories the probability distribution of the fields at times between and , indicated by the filled ovals, may depend on the perturbation. Nevertheless, the firing rate of a “detector” placed at or near these ovals must not depend on the perturbation (or else the no-signaling condition would be violated).