1. Quantum Measurement: “Collapse” vs Constraint
The classical confusion
Standard story:
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The system has a state.
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Measurement “interacts” with it.
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The wavefunction “collapses” to a definite value.
This produces endless puzzles:
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What triggers collapse?
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Is it physical? epistemic? observer-dependent?
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Why this outcome rather than another?
All of this presupposes:
a system with an independent state that is altered by an external measurement.
The constraint reconstruction
There is no independently existing state waiting to be revealed or collapsed.
Instead:
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the experimental configuration defines a constraint structure,
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within which only certain outcomes are possible,
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and an outcome is actualised within that constraint.
Measurement is:
the reconfiguration of constraints that makes certain distinctions actualisable.
What disappears
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The measurement problem (as a metaphysical crisis)
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The need for collapse mechanisms
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The observer/system dualism
What remains is simply:
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constrained actualisation within an experimental configuration.
2. Quantum Entanglement: “Spooky Action” vs Non-Separability
The classical confusion
Entangled systems appear to exhibit:
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instantaneous influence across distance,
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“spooky action at a distance,”
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violation of locality.
This is only puzzling if one assumes:
two independent systems exchanging influence.
The constraint reconstruction
There are not two independent systems.
There is:
a single relational structure with non-factorisable constraints.
The correlations arise because:
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the possible outcomes are jointly constrained,
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not because something travels between locations.
What disappears
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Nonlocal “action”
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Faster-than-light influence paradoxes
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The need to reconcile separability with correlation
What remains is:
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global constraint structure actualised locally.
3. Conservation Laws: “Substance Preservation” vs Invariance
The classical confusion
We are told:
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energy is conserved,
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momentum is conserved,
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something persists through change.
This invites:
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substance metaphysics (“energy as a thing”),
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transfer models (“energy flows from A to B”).
The constraint reconstruction
Conservation expresses:
invariance across allowable transformations.
Nothing is “carried.”
Rather:
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transformations are constrained such that certain relations remain constant.
What disappears
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The idea of conserved quantities as substances
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The need for “carriers” of energy or momentum
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The metaphysical question “where does it go?”
What remains is:
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constraint on transformation structure.
4. Fields: “Physical Medium” vs Relational Description
The classical confusion
Fields are often treated as:
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things filling space,
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entities with physical reality,
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mediators of force.
But this raises questions:
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What is a field made of?
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How does it “act” at a distance?
The constraint reconstruction
A field is:
a mathematical representation of how constraints vary across configurations.
It is not a substance.
It does not act.
It encodes:
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relational dependencies,
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structured variation,
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allowable interactions.
What disappears
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The need to reify fields as entities
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Questions about their “substance”
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The problem of mediation
What remains is:
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a compact description of constraint structure.
5. Classical Mechanics: “Forces” vs Structured Relations
The classical confusion
Force is treated as:
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something exerted,
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transmitted between bodies,
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causing acceleration.
The constraint reconstruction
Equations of motion describe:
relations among variables that constrain how configurations can change.
Force is not a thing.
It is:
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a parameter within a relational description.
What disappears
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The image of force as a pushing entity
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The metaphysical question “how does force act?”
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The need for hidden mechanisms
What remains is:
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structured dependence among variables.
6. Statistical Mechanics: “Microstates Producing Macrostates”
The classical confusion
We imagine:
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microscopic particles with independent states,
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whose interactions “produce” macroscopic behaviour.
This leads to:
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puzzles about emergence,
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reductionism vs holism,
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probabilistic interpretation problems.
The constraint reconstruction
Macro-behaviour reflects:
large-scale constraint structures over possible configurations.
“Microstates” are not independently real building blocks.
They are:
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a way of parameterising possible configurations.
Probability reflects:
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distribution across constrained possibilities,not
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ignorance of independent realities.
What disappears
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The metaphysical gap between micro and macro
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The need for emergence as a mysterious process
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The reification of particles as fundamental units
What remains is:
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multi-scale constraint articulation.
7. Relativity: “Spacetime” vs Relational Order
The classical confusion
Spacetime is treated as:
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a container,
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a fabric that bends,
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an entity with geometry.
The constraint reconstruction
Relativity encodes:
invariant relations among measurements across configurations.
Spacetime is not a thing.
It is:
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a structured relational ordering.
Curvature expresses:
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constraint on possible trajectories.
What disappears
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The image of spacetime as a substance
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Questions about its “physical nature”
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The need to imagine bending fabric
What remains is:
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invariant relational structure.
Final Synthesis
Across all these domains, the same pattern appears:
| Classical Interpretation | Constraint Reconstruction |
|---|---|
| Independent systems | Relational structure |
| Transmission | Constraint |
| Forces/fields as entities | Descriptive parameters |
| Laws as governing rules | Invariance |
| Time as container | Derived order |
The Deeper Point
None of the mathematics of physics changes.
None of its predictive success is threatened.
What changes is this:
we stop misdescribing the formalism in terms it does not require.
The independence assumption adds:
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substances,
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carriers,
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mechanisms,
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metaphysical puzzles.
Remove it, and:
the puzzles vanish — because they were artefacts of the interpretation.
Closing Strike
Physics does not require:
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independent objects,
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transmitted causes,
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or governing laws.
It requires only:
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structured relations,
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constrained possibilities,
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and actualisation within those constraints.
Everything else was projection.
