Quantum Mechanics of Individual Systems
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 02:05 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Quantum mechanics can start from assertions about individual systems, from which the standard ensemble statistics are derived.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
A formulation of quantum mechanics is given which begins by postulating assertions for individual physical systems. The statistical predictions of quantum mechanics for infinite ensembles are then derived from its assertions for individual systems. A discussion of the meaning of the state of an individual quantum mechanical system is given, and an application is made to the clarification of some of the paradoxical features of the theory.
What carries the argument
Postulates that assert properties of individual physical systems, from which the statistical predictions for ensembles follow.
If this is right
- The standard statistical predictions for infinite ensembles follow directly from the individual assertions.
- The state of an individual system has a meaning that does not presuppose ensemble statistics.
- Some apparent paradoxes in quantum mechanics receive clarification when viewed from the standpoint of assertions about single systems.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The formulation opens a route to discussing outcomes of single experiments without first averaging over many trials.
- It may connect to questions about how the postulates translate into definite records in a single run of an apparatus.
- The same starting point could be examined for consistency with finite but large collections of systems.
Load-bearing premise
The assertions postulated for individual systems are sufficient to derive the full set of standard quantum predictions for infinite ensembles without additional postulates or circular reference to ensemble statistics.
What would settle it
A concrete calculation showing that the individual-system postulates cannot recover a standard ensemble result, such as the Born-rule probabilities for a sequence of position measurements, without introducing new rules.
read the original abstract
A formulation of quantum mechanics, which begins by postulating assertions for individual physical systems, is given. The statistical predictions of quantum mechanics for infinite ensembles are then derived from its assertions for individual systems. A discussion of the meaning of the "state" of an individual quantum mechanical system is given, and an application is made to the clarification of some of the paradoxical features of the theory.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper presents a formulation of quantum mechanics that begins by postulating assertions applicable to individual physical systems. From these, it derives the standard statistical predictions of quantum mechanics for infinite ensembles. It includes a discussion of the meaning of the 'state' of an individual quantum system and applies the approach to clarify certain paradoxical features of the theory.
Significance. If the derivation from individual-system assertions to ensemble statistics succeeds without circular appeal to ensemble concepts or additional postulates, the work would offer a notable foundational contribution by grounding QM in individual systems rather than ensembles from the outset. The explicit separation of individual assertions from derived ensemble predictions, together with the discussion of state meaning and paradox clarification, strengthens the case for this approach if the steps hold.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive summary, significance assessment, and recommendation to accept the manuscript.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation presented as independent from individual postulates
full rationale
The paper explicitly claims to start from postulates for individual systems and derive ensemble statistics without additional postulates or circular reference to ensembles. No equations, self-citations, or steps are quoted in the provided source that reduce the central derivation to a fit, renaming, or self-referential definition by construction. The derivation chain is therefore treated as self-contained against external benchmarks, consistent with the most common honest finding for such foundational reformulations.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Assertions can be postulated directly for individual physical systems independently of ensemble statistics.
discussion (0)
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