At 4:28 AM 11/27/2015, John C. wrote:
A paper by my former graduate advisor, Jeff Bub, who was a student of David Bohm's. http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/17/11/7374 The Measurement Problem from the Perspective of an Information-Theoretic Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics Yes, Bub's insistence on the absolute randomness would remain invincible as far as third-person probabilities are taken for granted from the outset in comprehending what messages would QM convey to us. On the other hand, once one may happen to feel at ease with the first-person probabilities (see, for instance, James Hartle's "Living in a superposition" http://arXiv.org/abs/1511.01550 ), the first-person probability of the occurrence of such an agent assuming the first-person status would come to approach unity even within the framework of the decoherent-histories interpretation of QM. Koichiro
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