The Problem of Hidden Variables in Quantum Mechanics

  • Kochen S
  • Specker E
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Abstract

Forty years after the advent of quantum mechanics the problem of hidden variables, that is, the possibility of imbedding quantum theory into a classical theory, remains a controversial and obscure subject. Whereas to most physicists the possibility of a classical reinterpretation of quantum mechanics remains remote and perhaps irrelevant to current problems, a minority have kept the issue alive throughout this period. (See Freistadt [5] for a review of the problem and a comprehensive bibliography up to 1957.) As far as results are concerned there are on the one hand purported proofs of the non-existence of hidden variables, most notably von Neumann's proof, and on the other, various attempts to introduce hidden variables such as de Broglie [4] and Bohm [1] and [2]. One of the difficulties in evaluating these contradictory results is that no exact mathematical criterion is given to enable one to judge the degree of success of these proposals.

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Kochen, S., & Specker, E. P. (1975). The Problem of Hidden Variables in Quantum Mechanics. In The Logico-Algebraic Approach to Quantum Mechanics (pp. 293–328). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-010-1795-4_17

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