On Weak Values and Feynman's Blind Alley

Feynman famously recommended accepting the basic principles of quantum mechanics without trying to guess the machinery behind the law. One of the corollaries of the Uncertainty Principle is that the knowledge of probability amplitudes does not allow one to make meaningful statements about the past o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dmitri Sokolovski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Quanta 2023-11-01
Series:Quanta
Online Access:http://quanta.ws/ojs/index.php/quanta/article/view/249
Description
Summary:Feynman famously recommended accepting the basic principles of quantum mechanics without trying to guess the machinery behind the law. One of the corollaries of the Uncertainty Principle is that the knowledge of probability amplitudes does not allow one to make meaningful statements about the past of an unobserved quantum system. A particular type of reasoning, based on weak values, appears to do just that. Has Feynman been proven wrong by the more recent developments? Most likely not. Quanta 2023; 12: 180–189.
ISSN:1314-7374