Paper
Einstein's Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics
Published Dec 1, 1972 · L. Ballentine
American Journal of Physics
44
Citations
3
Influential Citations
Abstract
Einstein's arguments concerning the interpretation of quantum mechanics are reviewed and contrasted with certain misconceptions regarding his attitude toward the theory. He considered Born's statistical interpretation to be the only satisfactory one, and he was not a supporter of hidden-variable theories such as that of Bohm. His criticism of the interpretation accepted, at least tacitly, by many physicists was that the quantum state function does not provide a description of an individual system but rather of an ensemble of similar systems. This criticism was not based merely upon his famous remark that God does not play dice, but upon some definite physical arguments which did not assume determinism.
Einstein considered Born's statistical interpretation to be the only satisfactory one, and did not support hidden-variable theories like Bohm's.
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