Redhead, Michael. The Tangled Story of Nonlocality in Quantum Mechanics."
Michael Redheads essay is
based on the assumption that nonlocality as instantaneous causal
action-at-a-distance is to be avoided since it violates the spirit of special
relativity. He therefore undertakes a meticulous examination of a variety of
proofs of nonlocality in the quantum mechanical treatment of many-particle
entangled states, seeking to detect and assess their assumptions.
Redhead starts with the
assumption that relativity is more than a phenomenological invariance
principle; instead it is grounded in the causal structure of spacetime.
Specifically, Redhead claims that relativity entails the Philosophically
Grounded Invariance Principle (PIP), which asserts that causal influences
cannot operate outside the light-cone. If, alternatively, relativity entailed
the First Signal Principle (FSP), it would disallow faster than light signals,
where signals are controllable causal processes. David Bohms interpretation
of quantum mechanics is both deterministic and, to many scholars, consistent
with relativity since it does not allow superluminal signaling - although it does
allow superluminal causal processes. But since Redhead believes that relativity
entails PIP, and since PIP _ FSP, Redhead claims that Bohms interpretation
violates relativity. He also objects to it on theological grounds, since its
determinism does not allow room for incompatibilist divine action. He
therefore turns to indeterministic approaches involving nonlocality in both
nonrelativistic and relativistic quantum mechanics.
He begins with John Bells
analysis of the (nonrelativistic) EPR argument, which delineated between two
meanings of nonlocality: a) action-at-a-distance between individual particles,
and b) nonseparability, in which at least some properties cannot be attached to
individual particles. Bells argument, in turn, rested on assumptions involving
joint probability distributions and determinism, both of which Redhead explores
in detail. He then discusses algebraic proofs of nonlocality that seek to
demonstrate that local hidden-variable theories are self-contradictory.
Next, Redhead turns to the
search for a relativistic EPR argument. First, he reviews the problems
encountered in seeking to translate the nonrelativistic EPR argument into a
relativistic context, paying particular attention the need to reformulate the
reality criterion (e.g., every element of physical reality must have a
counterpart in the theory). A relativistic EPR argument must employ a
relativistic wavefunction and must not depend on the existence of absolute
time- ordering for space-like events. Redhead describes in detail one proposal
for a relativistic reality criterion by Ghirardi and Grassi and its reliance on
the truth of certain classes of counterfactual statements. Ghirardi and
Grassis argument involves a distinction between what Redhead describes as
OM-Loc, that the outcome of a measurement cannot be influenced by performing
nonlocal measurements, and ER-Loc, that elements of reality cannot be created
by performing nonlocal measurements. Ghirardi and Grassi claim to show that
relativity and quantum mechanics are in peaceful coexistence, but to do so
they must also claim that violating ER-Loc is more serious than violating
OM-Loc. Redhead disagrees, but offers a further assumption which he calls the
Principle of Local Counterfactual Definiteness (PLCD). With this he shows
that Ghirardi and Grassis relativistic reformulation of the EPR argument is
less general than they suggest; it is in fact limited to deterministic systems.
In his concluding section
Redhead first argues that nonlocality seems unavoidable for any reconstruction
of quantum mechanics which is both realist, i.e., in which all observables have
sharp values at all times, and deterministic. We either turn to a stochastic
hidden-variable framework or seek to understand correlations in terms of what
Shimony describes as passion-at- a-distance. In the anti-realist option
pursued by Ghirardi and Grassi, Redhead challenges the claim that the existence
of action-at-a-distance is not a valid deduction from the EPR argument, but he
then rescues the claim by the additional assumption of determinism. He regards
his results as closing further gaps in the peaceful co-existence argument, but
the mysterious harmony of quantum correlations remains spooky even if it
does not involve causal dependence. For the anti-realist, the role of
measurement is to actualize potentialities. But when quantum mechanics is
applied to cosmology, where there is nothing outside the universe to serve as
a measuring device, the realist option may be preferred, and with it the notion
of nonseparability.
Redheads essay thus gives
arguments for invoking either indeterminism or holistic nonseparability. The
author sees these as having important theological implications: indeterminism
is important for theories of divine action on particular occasions, while
holism is an anti- reductionist thesis which shows how every element of the
universe has for its ground of being the totality of the whole, which
pantheists would want to identify with God.
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