When will two agents agree on a quantum measurement outcome? Intersubjective agreement in QBism (2312.07728v1)
Abstract: In the QBist approach to quantum mechanics, a measurement is an action an agent takes on the world external to herself. A measurement device is an extension of the agent and both measurement outcomes and their probabilities are personal to the agent. According to QBism, nothing in the quantum formalism implies either that the quantum state assignments of two agents or their respective measurement outcomes need to be mutually consistent. Recently, Khrennikov has claimed that QBism's personalist theory of quantum measurement is invalidated by Ozawa's so-called intersubjectivity theorem. Here, following Stacey, we refute Khrennikov's claim by showing that it is not Ozawa's mathematical theorem but an additional assumption made by Khrennikov that QBism is incompatible with. We then address the question of intersubjective agreement in QBism more generally. Even though there is never a necessity for two agents to agree on their respective measurement outcomes, a QBist agent can strive to create conditions under which she would expect another agent's reported measurement outcome to agree with hers. It turns out that the assumptions of Ozawa's theorem provide an example for just such a condition.
- C. A. Fuchs, “QBism, the Perimeter of Quantum Bayesianism,” arXiv:1003.5209.
- R. Schack, ‘‘QBism: quantum mechanics is not a description of objective reality---it reveals a world of genuine free will,’’ The Conversation (29 March 2023).
- R. Schack, ‘‘A QBist reads Merleau-Ponty,’’ arXiv:2212.11094.
- A. Khrennikov, ‘‘Ozawa’s Intersubjectivity Theorem as objection to QBism individual agent perspective,’’ arXiv:2301.04014.
- M. Ozawa, ‘‘Intersubjectivity of outcomes of quantum measurements,’’ arXiv:1911.10893.
- B. C. Stacey, ‘‘Whose Probabilities? About What? A Reply to Khrennikov,’’ arXiv:2302.09475.
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