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Phys. Rev. A 54, 2759–2774 (1996)

Consistent histories and quantum reasoning

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Robert B. Griffiths
Department of Physics, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213

Received 12 June 1996; published in the issue dated October 1996

A system of quantum reasoning for a closed system is developed by treating nonrelativistic quantum mechanics as a stochastic theory. The sample space corresponds to a decomposition, as a sum of orthogonal projectors, of the identity operator on a Hilbert space of histories. Provided a consistency condition is satisfied, the corresponding Boolean algebra of histories, called a framework, can be assigned probabilities in the usual way, and within a single framework quantum reasoning is identical to ordinary probabilistic reasoning. A refinement rule, which allows a probability distribution to be extended from one framework to a larger (refined) framework, incorporates the dynamical laws of quantum theory. Two or more frameworks which are incompatible because they possess no common refinement cannot be simultaneously employed to describe a single physical system. Logical reasoning is a special case of probabilistic reasoning in which (conditional) probabilities are 1 (true) or 0 (false). As probabilities are only meaningful relative to some framework, the same is true of the truth or falsity of a quantum description. The formalism is illustrated using simple examples, and the physical considerations which determine the choice of a framework are discussed. © 1996 The American Physical Society.

© 1996 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.54.2759
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevA.54.2759
PACS:
03.65.Bz, 03.65.Ca, 05.30.-d

See Also

Comment: R. L. Schafir, Comment on “Consistent histories and quantum reasoning”, Phys. Rev. A 58, 3353 (1998).

Reply: Robert B. Griffiths, Reply to “Comment on ‘Consistent histories and quantum reasoning’ ”, Phys. Rev. A 58, 3356 (1998).