Tuesday, 12 May 2026

The Evening Mr Blottisham Accidentally Destabilised Classical Reality

The Senior Common Room was unusually crowded that evening, though nobody seemed entirely certain why. Rain feathered softly against the leaded windows. A coal fire breathed in the grate with the exhausted dignity of an empire declining by inches.

Professor Quillibrace sat precisely where one expected him to sit: motionless except for the occasional adjustment of spectacles that always seemed less corrective than prosecutorial.

Mr Blottisham stood near the mantelpiece with the buoyant confidence of a man about to solve twentieth-century physics between sips of sherry.

Miss Elowen Stray sat slightly apart, notebook open, watching the room with the alert stillness of someone listening not merely to what was said, but to what had to remain unsaid for the saying to work.

Blottisham flourished a biscuit.

“Well,” he announced, “I still think quantum mechanics is plainly absurd.”

Quillibrace looked up mildly.

“Oh?”

“Yes. Particles that are waves, cats both dead and alive, things communicating faster than light, observers magically creating reality — honestly, one feels science rather lost its nerve after Newton.”

Quillibrace folded his hands.

“An understandable impression,” he said. “Though it is perhaps worth noticing that quantum mechanics itself appears considerably less distressed than its interpreters.”

Blottisham blinked.

“I beg your pardon?”

“The theory works,” said Quillibrace. “With extraordinary precision. One might even say offensively so. Its predictions are astonishingly successful. The mathematics behaves impeccably. The experiments cooperate with tedious consistency.”

“Yes, but—”

“The instability,” Quillibrace continued, “appears chiefly when physicists attempt to explain what they believe the mathematics must be about.”

Miss Stray looked up.

“So the crisis is interpretive before it is scientific?”

“Quite.”

Blottisham frowned suspiciously.

“Well surely physics must describe reality.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace, “but that statement conceals an ontology.”

“A what?”

“An inherited picture of what reality must fundamentally consist of.”

Blottisham sighed faintly, as though philosophy had once again entered the room without permission.

Quillibrace continued.

“Much of modern scientific intuition still operates within what one might call a Galilean ontology. Reality is assumed to consist fundamentally of determinate objects possessing intrinsic properties independently of observation.”

“Well naturally,” said Blottisham.

“Naturally,” Quillibrace agreed. “Which is why the assumption becomes difficult to see.”

Miss Stray leaned forward slightly.

“And measurement, in that framework, simply reveals what is already there?”

“Precisely. Observation is passive disclosure. Science becomes increasingly accurate description of pre-given reality.”

Blottisham brightened.

“Yes! Exactly! Splendid.”

Quillibrace regarded him sympathetically.

“And quantum mechanics proceeds to behave in ways that this ontology finds deeply offensive.”

Blottisham paused.

“Yes, well. Quite.”

Quillibrace reached for his teacup.

“Superposition appears to violate determinate statehood. Measurement appears to disturb rather than reveal. Entanglement appears to violate separability. The double-slit experiment appears to destabilise object identity.”

“Because those things do violate reality,” said Blottisham firmly.

“No,” said Quillibrace. “They violate a particular expectation about reality.”

A small silence followed.

Miss Stray spoke softly.

“The expectation that systems must already possess determinate properties prior to interaction.”

Quillibrace inclined his head slightly.

“Exactly so.”

Blottisham looked irritated.

“But surely a thing must already be something before we measure it.”

“Must it?”

“Yes.”

“Why?”

Blottisham opened his mouth.

Closed it.

Opened it again.

“Because otherwise one gets nonsense.”

Quillibrace nodded.

“One gets nonsense relative to a substance ontology of completed objects.”

Miss Stray smiled faintly.

“But not necessarily relative to a relational ontology.”

Blottisham stared at her.

“Oh dear,” he muttered.

Quillibrace continued calmly.

“Suppose instead we begin not with pre-given objects, but with relationally structured potential.”

Blottisham looked physically pained.

“You’re going to tell me particles aren’t real.”

“On the contrary,” said Quillibrace. “I am suggesting that what we call ‘objects’ may be relatively stable actualisations within a structured field of possibility.”

Blottisham waved a hand helplessly.

“That sounds suspiciously like philosophy.”

“It is philosophy,” said Quillibrace. “The physicists simply prefer performing it accidentally.”

Miss Stray suppressed a smile into her teacup.

Quillibrace continued.

“From this perspective, a quantum ‘state’ is not a hidden property waiting to be uncovered. It is a structured potential capable of different actualisations under differing relational constraints.”

“And measurement?” asked Miss Stray.

“Not passive observation,” said Quillibrace, “but a constrained relational event through which determinate outcomes are instantiated.”

Blottisham looked alarmed.

“So the observer does create reality?”

“No,” said Quillibrace dryly. “That unfortunate sentence is what happens when metaphysics collides with journalism.”

Miss Stray laughed quietly.

“The point is subtler,” she said. “Determinate outcomes emerge through relational actualisation, not because consciousness magically manufactures existence.”

“Exactly,” said Quillibrace.

Blottisham stared into the fire as though hoping Newton might emerge from it personally.

“So superposition,” he said cautiously, “would not mean a particle is literally in contradictory states?”

“No,” said Quillibrace. “Only that determinacy has not yet stabilised under the relevant constraints.”

“And collapse?”

“A transition from unresolved potential into constrained actualisation.”

“And entanglement?”

Quillibrace adjusted his spectacles.

“Evidence that separability may itself be a derived achievement rather than an ontological primitive.”

Blottisham looked stricken.

“You mean objects are not fundamental?”

“Not in the way classical ontology assumes.”

A long silence settled over the room.

Rain pressed softly against the windows.

Finally Miss Stray spoke.

“So quantum mechanics does not necessarily destroy realism.”

“No,” said Quillibrace. “It destabilises a particular kind of realism.”

“The realism of completed substances.”

“Quite.”

Blottisham looked deeply betrayed.

“But classical physics works beautifully.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace. “Because at macroscopic scales relational constraints produce extraordinarily durable regimes of stability.”

Miss Stray nodded slowly.

“So classical objects are not illusions.”

“No. They are achievements.”

That seemed to alter the atmosphere slightly.

Blottisham frowned into his sherry.

“So the paradoxes appear when we mistake stable actualisations for foundational ontology.”

Quillibrace looked pleasantly surprised.

“Very good, Mr Blottisham.”

Blottisham brightened immediately.

“I knew it would come right if we waited.”

Quillibrace ignored this.

“The deeper shift,” he said quietly, “is not from certainty to uncertainty.”

Miss Stray finished the thought almost before he had spoken it.

“But from reality as pre-completed structure…”

“…to reality as structured actualisation,” said Quillibrace.

The fire settled softly into itself.

Blottisham stared into the middle distance with the haunted expression of a man beginning to suspect that matter itself might have become conditional.

At length he spoke.

“So quantum mechanics works perfectly well.”

“Yes.”

“And the interpretive crisis comes from insisting on reading it through an ontology built for a different scale of stability.”

“Precisely.”

Blottisham sighed heavily.

“So the famous paradoxes…”

Quillibrace gave the faintest hint of a smile.

“…may simply mark the boundary of an older way of thinking about what reality must be like.”

Quantum Mechanics and the Repair of Objecthood — 6 Relational Closure: The Dissolution of the Repair Problem

At this point the series stops behaving like a set of interpretations of quantum mechanics and begins to resemble what it has been all along: a sequence of increasingly refined attempts to restore a single expectation that never quite survives contact with the formalism itself.

That expectation is simple, almost invisible in its familiarity:

that physics should ultimately be a theory of objects with determinate properties, whether those objects are hidden, multiplied, collapsed, or re-described.

Across Copenhagen, Many Worlds, Bohmian mechanics, objective collapse, and QBism, this expectation is never abandoned. It is only displaced, reformulated, or relocated.

What changes in each case is not the formalism of quantum theory. What changes is the site at which objecthood is assumed to stabilise.

And now that pattern itself becomes visible.


1. The accumulated pressure: five strategies for saving objecthood

Each interpretation can now be seen as a distinct strategy for managing the same structural tension:

  • Copenhagen: objecthood is localised in measurement contexts
  • Many Worlds: objecthood is preserved by branching universes
  • Bohmian mechanics: objecthood is restored beneath the wavefunction
  • Objective collapse: objecthood is enforced by dynamical law
  • QBism: objecthood is relocated into structured experience

Each strategy preserves something essential from the classical inheritance:

  • definiteness
  • separability
  • stable outcomes
  • a coherent notion of “what exists”

But each also reveals, in its own way, that these features do not sit comfortably as primitive ontological givens within the quantum formalism.

The result is not disagreement about what quantum mechanics says. It is disagreement about where objecthood is allowed to survive.


2. The deeper pattern: mis-siting the source of stability

What unifies these interpretations is not their conclusions but their shared misidentification of the level at which stability is produced.

They all assume, in different ways, that:

  • instability is a feature of the world that must be explained
  • objecthood is a property that must be recovered
  • determinacy is something that must be secured somewhere

But this presupposes a prior distinction between:

  • a domain of indeterminate formal evolution
  • and a domain of determinate ontological fact

Quantum mechanics does not cleanly support this division. It provides a structure in which stability appears only under specific constraints of interaction, scale, and coordination.

The “problem of interpretation” arises when this conditional stability is reified into a demand for global ontological grounding.


3. Relational diagnosis: objecthood as an effect of constrained actualisation

From a relational standpoint grounded in instantiation and immanence, the shift is straightforward but consequential:

objecthood is not what quantum theory fails to explain. It is what quantum theory continuously produces under constraint.

That is:

  • there is no underlying regime of fully formed objects waiting to be described
  • there is no need to choose between competing ontologies of “what really exists”
  • there is only a field of relational potential that stabilises into repeatable configurations under specific conditions

What we call:

  • measurement
  • outcome
  • particle
  • system

are not foundational entities. They are stabilised patterns of coordination within a stratified process of actualisation.

The interpretive “problem” therefore changes status. It is not a gap in the theory. It is a byproduct of treating stabilised outcomes as if they were ontologically prior to the conditions that produce them.


4. Re-siting move: from ontological repair to managed openness

Once this is seen, something subtle happens: the entire interpretive landscape stops appearing as a set of competing answers and begins to look like a series of increasingly elaborate repair attempts for a question that was mis-posed.

Each interpretation is trying to do one of three things:

  • restore classical objecthood
  • redistribute it across structure
  • or relocate it into epistemology

But none of these moves are required by the formalism itself.

What the formalism actually gives is not a world of indeterminate objects waiting for interpretation. It gives a structured space of constraints within which stable, repeatable outcomes can be produced under specific conditions of coupling and measurement.

Objectivity, in this view, is not the elimination of variation. It is the achievement of constrained stability within variation.

So the final shift is not a new interpretation alongside the others. It is a re-description of what interpretation itself is doing:

interpretation is the attempt to convert conditional stability into unconditional ontology.

Relational ontology refuses that conversion.


Closing re-description

Quantum mechanics does not require us to decide what kind of thing the wavefunction “really is,” because the assumption that it must correspond to a single ontological category is precisely what the formalism destabilises.

Instead, it suggests something more restrained and more demanding:

  • that what is stable is not what is fundamental
  • that what is fundamental is not what is stable
  • and that objecthood is an achievement of constrained relational coordination, not a precondition for physical description

Seen this way, the entire interpretive tradition is not a series of competing metaphysics.

It is a record of the difficulty of abandoning a single expectation:

that science must ultimately deliver a picture of what exists, rather than a disciplined account of how stable existence is temporarily produced.

Once that expectation is released, nothing collapses.

But something important does change.

The problem of interpretation dissolves—not because quantum mechanics becomes clear, but because the demand for a final ontological picture is no longer treated as the criterion of understanding.

What remains is not uncertainty about reality.

It is the more precise task:

to understand how stability becomes available at all, without mistaking it for what must always already have been there.

Quantum Mechanics and the Repair of Objecthood — 5 QBism: The Withdrawal of Ontology into Agency

If objective collapse theories try to fix quantum mechanics by modifying the dynamics of reality itself, QBism performs a more radical manoeuvre: it refuses to treat the quantum state as a statement about reality at all.

Instead of asking how the world evolves, it asks how agents update expectations under constraint. The formalism is retained, but its referent is displaced. What was once a description of physical systems becomes a structured calculus of belief, commitment, and experience.

The effect is not to solve the quantum problem, but to remove its ontological footing entirely.


1. Quantum pressure point: the indeterminacy of the wavefunction’s referent

Across all previous interpretations, the wavefunction has been treated as something that must be anchored:

  • Copenhagen: operational boundary around it
  • Many Worlds: universal ontological object
  • Bohm: guiding field over hidden variables
  • GRW: physical entity undergoing collapse

But the formalism itself does not specify what kind of thing the wavefunction is. It provides a rule for updating it, not a criterion for its ontological status.

The pressure point becomes explicit:

why assume the wavefunction represents a property of the world at all?


2. Interpretation as repair: reclassifying quantum theory as a theory of experience

QBism responds by shifting the entire interpretive frame.

The key move is simple but destabilising:

  • the wavefunction is not a physical object
  • it is not a field in space
  • it is not a hidden structure or a global state

It is a representation of an agent’s expectations about the outcomes of their own possible actions.

Measurement is not revelation of an external property. It is an update in the experience of an agent interacting with a system.

So:

  • probabilities are personal, not ontic
  • quantum states are subjective degrees of belief
  • “outcomes” are events in experience, not revelations of pre-existing facts

Objectivity is reconstructed not as correspondence to a mind-independent state of affairs, but as intersubjective agreement emerging from constrained interaction.


3. Relational diagnosis: the relocation of structure into epistemic form

At first glance, QBism appears to dissolve the measurement problem entirely by refusing to treat it as a problem about reality. But relationally, what happens is more subtle.

The ontological burden is not removed. It is relocated:

  • from world → agent
  • from system → experience
  • from dynamics → belief update

This produces a clean inversion:

what earlier interpretations tried to stabilise in reality, QBism stabilises in the structure of agency itself.

But this move depends on a strong separation:

  • agents are taken as primitive
  • experiences are taken as fundamental
  • the formalism regulates how experiences are updated under interaction

So while QBism refuses to say what the world is like independently of experience, it does presuppose a structured field of agency-world interaction in which updates are coherent, repeatable, and communicable.

Relationally, this is crucial:

the ontology is withdrawn, but the coordination problem remains fully intact.

What disappears is not structure, but its attribution to external reality.


4. Re-siting move: quantum formalism as constrained relational anticipation

From the standpoint of instantiation and immanence, QBism can be re-described without accepting its epistemic primacy or rejecting its insights.

The wavefunction need not be treated as a belief state inside an agent. Nor need it be re-ontologised as a physical field. Instead, it can be understood as:

a formal encoding of constrained anticipatory relations within a system of possible interactions.

On this reading:

  • “agent” is not a metaphysical subject but a locus of relational coordination
  • “belief update” is not subjective opinion revision but structured adjustment of anticipatory constraints
  • “measurement outcome” is a stabilised relational event within a coupled system

The key shift is that epistemology is no longer the foundation of the formalism. It is one of the ways relational systems track and regulate their own instantiation dynamics.

QBism correctly identifies that quantum theory is not a straightforward picture of pre-given objects. But it relocates this insight entirely into agency, thereby risking a collapse of ontology into epistemology.

Relationally, the deeper move is to see both “agent” and “system” as positions within a single field of constrained relational actualisation, rather than as fundamentally separate domains.


Closing transition

QBism completes a remarkable arc. Where earlier interpretations tried to preserve objecthood—either by hiding it, multiplying it, restoring it, or enforcing it—QBism removes it from the ontology altogether and reconstructs quantum theory as a calculus of experiential update.

But this raises a final pressure point that none of the previous strategies fully escape:

if objecthood is neither given, hidden, multiplied, enforced, nor internalised as belief, then what stabilises the distinction between system, measurement, and outcome in the first place?

The final interpretation in the series does not answer this by moving further inward or outward. Instead, it returns to the structure of physical law itself, and asks what happens when even the idea of a universal, observer-independent description is abandoned.

And at that point, quantum mechanics stops being a theory of objects—or of experience—and becomes a theory of constraints without privileged ontology.

Quantum Mechanics and the Repair of Objecthood — 4 Objective Collapse: Localising Instability as Event

If Bohmian mechanics restores continuity beneath appearance, objective collapse theories take the opposite route: they accept that continuity is not universally preservable and relocate discontinuity into the dynamics of the world itself.

The strategy is no longer to preserve classical objecthood beneath quantum behaviour, but to make the breakdown of superposition itself a physical process. Instability is not hidden, denied, or distributed. It is promoted to ontology.


1. Quantum pressure point: the persistence of superposition at macroscopic scale

The formal tension is by now familiar:

  • microscopic systems are well-described by superpositions
  • macroscopic experience is definitively single-outcome
  • the unitary dynamics does not, by itself, select outcomes

In standard quantum mechanics, nothing in the Schrödinger evolution specifies when or how a superposition becomes a single realised outcome. Measurement remains structurally special without being dynamically explained.

The pressure point is therefore not indeterminacy itself, but its scale-invariance:

why do we not observe macroscopic superpositions if the formalism applies universally?


2. Interpretation as repair: collapse as a physical process

GRW theory (Ghirardi–Rimini–Weber) and related objective collapse models answer this by modifying the dynamics itself.

Instead of treating collapse as:

  • epistemic update (Copenhagen)
  • branching (Many Worlds)
  • hidden determinacy (Bohm)

collapse is treated as:

  • a real, spontaneous physical process
  • occurring randomly but objectively
  • becoming more significant for larger systems

In this framework:

  • superpositions are not always preserved
  • wavefunctions occasionally undergo spontaneous localisation
  • macroscopic definiteness is dynamically enforced

Objecthood is not assumed. It is periodically produced.


3. Relational diagnosis: converting a representational tension into a dynamical law

The critical move is subtle but decisive.

Objective collapse theories do not reject the quantum formalism. They alter it so that the formalism itself now contains the mechanism that was previously missing: the transition from multiplicity to definiteness.

But relationally, something important shifts in how the problem is framed.

The measurement problem is no longer treated as:

  • a problem of interpretation
  • a problem of observation
  • a problem of epistemic access

It is re-described as:

a missing term in the dynamics of physical actualisation

This appears to solve the issue by relocating it into physics proper.

However, this relocation depends on a deeper assumption:

that “definite outcomes” are ontologically primary enough to require dynamical enforcement.

So collapse theories do not merely add a mechanism. They preserve a demand:

that reality must periodically resolve itself into singular, stable objecthood.

The instability of superposition is not accepted as a feature of relational structure. It is treated as something that must be suppressed by law-like intervention.

In this sense, collapse is not just a physical event. It is a regulated interruption of relational openness.


4. Re-siting move: collapse as constrained stabilisation of relational fields

From the perspective of instantiation and immanence, collapse can be re-described without treating it as a literal physical jump in ontology.

What collapse theories name as a stochastic physical event can be understood as:

a thresholded stabilisation of relational configuration under constraint, producing locally irreversible coordination of outcomes.

On this reading:

  • superposition is not a failure of definiteness
  • it is a regime of unresolved relational potential
  • “collapse” marks the point at which constraints produce stable, non-interfering actualisation

But crucially, this stabilisation is not an intervention from outside the system. It is an emergent property of the same relational dynamics that generate superposition in the first place.

Collapse becomes:

  • not a breakdown of quantum reality
  • but a phase transition in relational stability under scale-dependent constraint

What GRW-type theories externalise as a new law can be re-sited as a description of when relational configurations cease to support interference and become effectively classical in structure.

Objecthood, again, is not eliminated or imposed. It is stabilised.


Closing transition

Objective collapse theories represent a decisive shift in the series. They no longer preserve continuity beneath quantum behaviour, nor do they multiply or conceal it. Instead, they introduce discontinuity into the dynamics itself as a real, law-governed event.

Instability is no longer an interpretive problem. It becomes a physical mechanism for producing stability.

But this raises a deeper question that none of the previous strategies can fully escape:

what kind of structure allows “definiteness” to function as something that must be enforced at all?

The next interpretation responds by moving even further away from ontological enforcement. It does not restore hidden variables, multiply worlds, or modify dynamics. It relocates the entire formalism into the structure of knowledge itself.

And in doing so, it removes reality from the wavefunction altogether.

Quantum Mechanics and the Repair of Objecthood — 3 Bohmian Mechanics: The Restoration of Hidden Continuity

If Copenhagen disciplines the question and Many Worlds multiplies the answer, Bohmian mechanics performs a more classical gesture: it refuses both dispersal and restriction by insisting that nothing essential has ever been discontinuous at all.

The quantum formalism, on this view, is not incomplete in its predictive reach. It is incomplete in its ontological visibility. Beneath the apparent indeterminacy lies a fully determinate dynamics, hidden from direct access but governing the behaviour of observed phenomena with strict continuity.

The repair is not outward (many worlds) or inward (epistemic containment). It is downward: a return to hidden structure.


1. Quantum pressure point: non-classical unpredictability

The formal trigger remains the same as in the previous interpretations:

  • systems are described by wavefunctions
  • wavefunctions evolve deterministically
  • measurement outcomes are probabilistic

But unlike classical statistical uncertainty, this probabilism is not obviously traceable to ignorance about underlying variables in the standard formulation. The theory does not tell us what determines individual outcomes.

So the pressure point becomes:

can indeterminacy be reinterpreted as epistemic rather than ontological?

De Broglie–Bohm theory answers yes—but only by positing that the missing structure exists, even if it is not directly observable.


2. Interpretation as repair: restoring determinate trajectories

Bohmian mechanics introduces a dual-level ontology:

  • a wavefunction evolving according to the Schrödinger equation
  • particles with definite positions at all times

The wavefunction does not collapse and does not represent mere knowledge. It functions as a guiding field that determines the trajectories of particles.

In this framework:

  • uncertainty is epistemic, not ontological
  • outcomes are determined by hidden initial conditions
  • probability reflects ignorance of precise configuration, not fundamental indeterminacy

What appears as quantum randomness is therefore re-described as classical determinism with inaccessible variables.

This is a restoration strategy. It preserves the classical intuition that the world is always already fully determinate.


3. Relational diagnosis: reinstating objecthood beneath the formalism

From a relational perspective, the critical move is not the introduction of particles or trajectories. It is the reassertion of a single, continuous layer of determinacy underlying all observable phenomena.

Objecthood is reinstalled in a strong form:

  • particles have definite positions independent of observation
  • trajectories are continuous and well-defined
  • measurement reveals, rather than produces, outcomes

But this restoration is not neutral. It requires a structural commitment:

that the apparent discontinuities of quantum phenomena are not ontological features, but epistemic shadows cast by an underlying deterministic process.

The relational tension appears here in a precise form:

what is treated as “hidden” is not absent—it is structurally indispensable to maintaining classical objecthood as a universal baseline.

So Bohmian mechanics does not eliminate the quantum problem. It relocates it:

  • from the level of outcomes
  • to the level of access

The world remains fully classical in its underlying structure; only our relation to it becomes restricted.

But this restriction is not derived from the formalism. It is imposed to preserve a particular image of what objecthood must be.


4. Re-siting move: determinacy as constrained relational actualisation

From the standpoint of instantiation and immanence, Bohmian mechanics can be re-described without treating hidden variables as literal ontological furniture.

The key shift is this:

what is called a “trajectory” can be understood as a stabilised continuity of relational constraints across instantiations.

On this reading:

  • the wavefunction encodes a field of relational potentialities
  • particle positions correspond to locally stabilised actualisations within that field
  • continuity is not hidden substance, but constraint-consistent persistence of configuration across instantiation

Determinacy is therefore not something underlying appearances. It is an emergent stability of relational coordination under dynamic constraint.

What Bohmian mechanics calls “hidden variables” becomes, in this reframing, a reification of the requirement that outcomes remain consistently traceable across successive instantiations.

The system does not require a hidden layer of classical objects. It requires only that relational configurations maintain structured continuity under evolution.


Closing transition

Bohmian mechanics restores determinacy by moving it out of sight but not out of existence. It preserves a classical ontology by embedding it beneath the quantum formalism as an unobservable but fully structured substrate.

Where Many Worlds proliferates objecthood, Bohmian mechanics consolidates it.

But both strategies share a common assumption: that objecthood must ultimately be secured somewhere in the ontology—either across branches or beneath trajectories.

The next repair strategy abandons this requirement in a different way. It does not restore hidden structure or multiply worlds. It modifies the dynamics themselves, making collapse part of physical law.

And with that move, instability is no longer hidden or dispersed.

It becomes an event.

Quantum Mechanics and the Repair of Objecthood — 2 Many Worlds: The Proliferation of Determinacy

Copenhagen stabilises quantum mechanics by restricting what may be said. Many Worlds stabilises it by refusing restriction altogether. Where Copenhagen contains the interpretive pressure by disciplining questions, Many Worlds absorbs it by multiplying outcomes until nothing is left unresolved—only distributed.

What changes is not the formalism. The Schrödinger equation remains untouched. What changes is the ontological strategy: instead of explaining how a single outcome becomes actual, the theory insists that all outcomes become actual, each in a distinct branch of reality.

The pressure is not resolved. It is dispersed.


1. Quantum pressure point: the failure of unique outcomes

The motivating tension is familiar: quantum mechanics assigns a superposition of possible outcomes to a system prior to measurement, yet observation yields a single, determinate result.

In classical grammar, this is intolerable:

  • one system
  • one measurement
  • one outcome

But the formalism does not privilege a single outcome at the level of unitary evolution. It evolves all components of the superposition symmetrically. The question then becomes: why do we experience a single result?

Many Worlds responds by rejecting the premise that there is only one.


2. Interpretation as repair: multiplying reality to preserve symmetry

The move associated with Many-worlds interpretation is structurally elegant and ontologically expensive.

Instead of introducing collapse, hidden variables, or measurement privilege, it asserts:

  • the wavefunction never collapses
  • all possible outcomes are realised
  • each outcome corresponds to a branching of the universe

Measurement is no longer a selection of reality. It is a divergence of reality.

What Copenhagen contains, Many Worlds proliferates.

This is a repair strategy that preserves the formalism’s symmetry at all costs. Nothing is singled out as special—not measurement, not observers, not classicality. The cost of symmetry is ontological multiplication.


3. Relational diagnosis: objecthood redistributed across branches

At first glance, Many Worlds appears to eliminate the measurement problem by removing the need for selection. But relationally, something more subtle occurs: objecthood is not eliminated; it is distributed across an unbounded multiplicity of branches.

Each branch contains:

  • a determinate observer state
  • a determinate measurement outcome
  • a locally classical world

So classical objecthood is not rejected. It is localised.

The crucial shift is this:

determinacy is preserved, but only by relocating it into a branching structure that is itself never experienced as a whole.

This produces a structural asymmetry. The theory posits a fully determinate universal state, but all access to determinacy is branch-relative.

From a relational perspective, this introduces a doubled objecthood:

  • global objecthood (wavefunction of the universe)
  • local objecthood (branch-relative classical worlds)

But the relationship between them is not itself given as an object within experience. It is inferred from the formalism.

Thus, what appears as ontological generosity (everything exists) is also a disciplined displacement: the burden of uniqueness is shifted from outcomes to perspective.


4. Re-siting move: branching as a stabilisation of unresolved construal

From the standpoint of instantiation and immanence, Many Worlds can be re-described without either endorsing or dismissing its ontology.

The key shift is to treat “branching” not as a literal multiplication of worlds, but as a formalisation of incompatible stabilisations of outcome within a single relational field of actualisation.

What is being called a “world” is, in this reading, a stabilised trajectory of constraints that yields consistent experiential structure.

The important point is not whether branches “really exist” as parallel universes. That question already assumes a prior ontology of worlds as self-contained containers.

Instead:

  • quantum evolution specifies a space of possible stabilisations
  • measurement correlates system and observer into a constrained configuration
  • what appears as a single outcome is a locally stabilised resolution of relational superposition

Many Worlds externalises this structure into ontology: it turns stability into multiplicity.

Relationally, however, the key issue is not multiplication but coordination:

how incompatible potential outcomes become non-interfering, stable regimes of experience under constraint.

Branching, then, can be understood as a representational strategy for managing the persistence of multiple consistent actualisations without privileging any single one as uniquely real.


Closing transition

Where Copenhagen controlled quantum indeterminacy by restricting what can be asked, Many Worlds controls it by refusing to select a privileged answer.

But this refusal comes at a cost: reality is preserved only by distributing determinacy across a structure no single perspective can survey.

The next strategies will move in the opposite direction again.

If Many Worlds resolves tension by multiplication, the next interpretation resolves it by reintroducing hidden continuity beneath the formalism itself.

And with that move, objecthood returns—but in a different place entirely.

Quantum Mechanics and the Repair of Objecthood — 1 Copenhagen: The Discipline of Containment

Quantum mechanics does not introduce uncertainty into a previously stable world. It exposes that stability was never doing the ontological work it was assumed to be doing. The formalism does not describe a world that has become strange; it describes a domain in which the classical expectation of determinate, context-independent objects no longer carries the same unexamined force.

What appears as a “measurement problem” is therefore already a symptom of a deeper displacement: the expectation that physical theory should deliver objects with properties independent of the conditions under which those properties are articulated.

Copenhagen is the first systematic attempt to manage this displacement without rebuilding the underlying ontology.


1. Quantum pressure point: the breakdown of object-independent definiteness

At the level of formal structure, quantum mechanics refuses a single classical requirement: that physical systems possess determinate properties independently of measurement contexts.

States evolve smoothly according to the Schrödinger equation, but measurement introduces outcomes that do not behave as simple unfoldings of pre-existing properties. Between preparation and measurement, the formalism does not assign definite values to all observables in the classical sense. Instead, it assigns a structure of possibilities encoded in the wavefunction.

This creates a tension that is not empirical but ontological in expectation:

  • Classical grammar: objects have properties; measurement reveals them
  • Quantum formalism: only outcomes under specified conditions are well-defined

The “problem” is not indeterminacy. It is the loss of warrant for treating determinacy as a background condition rather than an achievement of specific experimental arrangements.


2. Interpretation as repair: restricting the question space

The Copenhagen response does not attempt to resolve this tension by positing hidden variables, parallel worlds, or deeper dynamics. Instead, it performs a more radical move: it restricts what counts as a legitimate question about physical reality.

Under this framing:

  • Quantum theory is a tool for predicting outcomes of experiments
  • Physical meaning is tied to measurement contexts
  • Questions about unmeasured properties are not considered physically well-formed

This is not ignorance of ontology; it is a deliberate containment strategy. Rather than extending ontology to cover the gap between formalism and classical intuition, Copenhagen narrows the domain of intelligible claims.

Objecthood is not explained. It is operationally localised to measurement arrangements.

In relational terms, this is a disciplined refusal to reify what only stabilises under specific conditions of instantiation.


3. Relational diagnosis: re-importing objecthood through the back door

The strength of Copenhagen is also its structural ambiguity. While it restricts ontology at the level of explicit claim, it depends on a background distinction that is not itself formally grounded:

  • quantum system
  • measuring apparatus
  • classical outcome domain

This triadic separation reintroduces a form of objecthood at the level of practice. The measuring apparatus is treated as effectively classical; outcomes are treated as determinate; and the system is treated as quantum.

But this separation is not derived from the formalism itself. It is imposed as a pragmatic boundary condition that allows the formalism to function operationally.

Relationally, this is crucial:

what is excluded from ontology at the level of interpretation reappears as stabilised asymmetry at the level of practice.

Copenhagen does not eliminate objecthood. It redistributes it:

  • from intrinsic property of systems
  • to stabilised outcome of measurement arrangements

But it leaves unexamined the process by which “measurement arrangement” becomes the privileged site where reality is allowed to stabilise.

The result is a controlled opacity: ontological questions are not answered, but displaced into the architecture of experimental coordination.


4. Re-siting move: objecthood as constrained actualisation

From a relational perspective grounded in instantiation and immanence, the Copenhagen move can be re-described without either endorsing or rejecting it.

What it calls “measurement” can be understood as a constrained regime of actualisation:

  • not the revelation of pre-existing properties
  • but the stabilisation of relational configurations under specific conditions

Objecthood is therefore not absent in quantum mechanics. It is not given in advance either. It is an effect of constrained coordination across a system–apparatus coupling that yields repeatable outcomes.

In this sense, Copenhagen is not wrong. It is incomplete in a very specific way: it treats the boundary condition (measurement) as primitive rather than derived.

Relational ontology shifts the emphasis:

  • from “what is measured is real”
  • to “what stabilises as measurable becomes real under specific constraints of instantiation”

This removes the need to treat measurement as a privileged ontological threshold while preserving its operational centrality.

Copenhagen’s containment strategy thus becomes legible as a pragmatic stabilisation of a deeper issue it cannot explicitly formulate:

not how observation reveals reality, but how relational configurations become stable enough to appear as observationally definitive.


Closing transition

Copenhagen does not solve the interpretive tension in quantum mechanics. It manages it by limiting where the tension is allowed to appear.

But the cost of containment is structural displacement: objecthood is no longer grounded, but it is still required; no longer defined, but still operationally assumed.

Once this becomes visible, containment is no longer sufficient.

The next strategies do not restrict the question space. They attempt to repopulate it.

And at that point, the system begins to multiply worlds.

Why Quantum Mechanics Forces Physics into Philosophy — And why that is not a failure of physics

There is a recurring pattern in modern physics that is often misunderstood.

A theory works exceptionally well at the level of prediction and experiment, yet generates persistent debate at the level of interpretation. The mathematics remains stable; the disagreement shifts to what the mathematics is about.

Quantum mechanics is the clearest case of this.

It functions with extraordinary precision. And yet it continues to generate disputes about:

  • the nature of the wavefunction,
  • the status of measurement,
  • the meaning of superposition,
  • the reality of entanglement,
  • and whether “collapse” is physical or merely formal.

These are not failures of calculation.

They are disagreements about ontology.

And that is where a subtle category shift occurs.


1. When physics becomes philosophy without noticing

At some point in every interpretation of quantum mechanics, physicists stop doing physics in the strict sense and begin doing something else:

they begin deciding what reality must be like in order for the formalism to make sense.

That move is not illegitimate. It is unavoidable.

But it is often unacknowledged.

Because questions like:

  • “What is the wavefunction really?”
  • “Do particles exist before measurement?”
  • “Is the universe deterministic or branching?”
  • “Does observation play a role in reality?”

are not questions that can be settled experimentally.

They are metaphysical questions — questions about how to interpret a successful formal system.

In other words:

they are philosophical questions.

This is not a criticism of physics. It is a clarification of what kind of question is being asked.


2. Born’s insight, often overlooked

Max Born once remarked:

“I am now convinced that theoretical physics is actual philosophy.”

This is not a poetic exaggeration. It is a recognition that theoretical physics inevitably involves commitments about what its formal structures mean.

Physics provides:

  • equations,
  • constraints,
  • predictions,
  • empirical structure.

But it does not provide, by itself:

  • an ontology of objects,
  • a theory of existence,
  • or a definition of what counts as “real”.

Those are added at the level of interpretation.

And that is where philosophical assumptions enter — often implicitly.


3. The hidden assumption: that physics must describe completed reality

A great deal of interpretive difficulty in quantum mechanics arises from a very specific inherited assumption:

reality must consist of fully determinate objects with properties that exist prior to measurement.

This assumption is historically rooted in classical (Galilean) physics, where it works extremely well at macroscopic scales.

But quantum mechanics repeatedly fails to behave in ways that preserve this picture cleanly.

And so tension appears:

  • superposition looks impossible,
  • measurement looks invasive,
  • entanglement looks nonlocal,
  • states appear indeterminate until interaction.

From within the classical assumption, these appear as paradoxes.

From within the formalism, they are simply features of how the system behaves.

So the question becomes:

is the theory wrong, or is the interpretation overextended?


4. The real issue: solving philosophical problems with more physics

One common response to these tensions is to modify physical theory:

  • hidden variables,
  • many-worlds,
  • collapse mechanisms,
  • alternative dynamics,
  • new ontologies of fields or information.

These are serious scientific proposals.

But they often share a deeper motivation:

they aim to restore a determinate picture of reality.

In other words, they try to resolve a philosophical discomfort by adjusting the physical formalism.

From a relational perspective, this is where a misalignment can occur:

a metaphysical expectation is treated as a physical problem.

The result is a cycle:

  • the formalism works,
  • the interpretation strains,
  • new formalism is proposed,
  • the same interpretive demand reappears.

Because the underlying expectation has not changed.


5. Physics does not need less philosophy — it needs explicit philosophy

The deeper issue is not that physicists are “doing philosophy badly”.

It is that they are often doing philosophy implicitly.

Concepts like:

  • object,
  • measurement,
  • state,
  • reality,
  • existence,
  • locality,

are not defined by the equations.

They are philosophical commitments that structure interpretation.

When these commitments remain implicit, they are harder to examine, and easier to project onto the formalism as if they were derived from it.

So the issue is not contamination of physics by philosophy.

It is the lack of clarity about where physics ends and interpretation begins.


6. A relational reframing

From a relational perspective, the situation can be re-described more cleanly:

  • Physics provides structured constraints on possible outcomes.
  • These constraints are extremely successful operationally.
  • Ontological interpretation is the attempt to say what those constraints “mean”.
  • Difficulty arises when interpretation assumes more structure (completed determinacy) than the formalism provides.

On this view, quantum mechanics is not a failure of realism.

It is a pressure point in a particular kind of realism:
one that assumes fully formed objects exist prior to relational determination.


7. Conclusion: a shift in responsibility

The implication is not that physics should stop doing interpretation.

Nor that philosophy should replace physics.

It is more subtle:

successful physics does not automatically determine a successful ontology.

So when interpretive problems arise, it is not always appropriate to demand a new physical theory.

Sometimes the more precise task is to examine the philosophical expectations being imposed on the existing one.

In that sense, Born’s remark is not incidental.

It is diagnostic.

Theoretical physics inevitably touches philosophy because it inevitably touches questions about what its successful formalisms are taken to be describing.

And once that is acknowledged, the real task becomes clearer:

not to eliminate philosophy from physics,

but to make it visible where it is already operating.