On QBism and Assumption (Q)
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 00:53 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Recent papers on Wigner's Friend extensions misrepresent QBist beliefs both historically and conceptually.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The author establishes that the recent literature on Wigner's Friend extensions contains a historical misapprehension and a conceptual misapprehension, both of which concern the accurate description of quantum physicists' beliefs, particularly those of QBists, by other authors.
What carries the argument
Assumption (Q), the conceptual premise whose attribution or relation to QBism is corrected.
If this is right
- Future work on Wigner's Friend scenarios must employ the actual QBist position rather than the misdescribed version.
- Historical accounts of quantum interpretations require revision to reflect the corrected description of QBism.
- Conceptual arguments about quantum states as agent beliefs would shift once the misattributions are removed.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Similar descriptive inaccuracies may appear in treatments of other quantum interpretations in thought-experiment literature.
- Direct self-descriptions by the physicists whose views are summarized could become standard in foundational papers.
- Clarification here opens the possibility of constructing new extensions of Wigner's Friend that properly incorporate the QBist stance.
Load-bearing premise
The author's reading of the recent literature accurately identifies the claimed misapprehensions and correctly represents the beliefs of the physicists in question.
What would settle it
Direct confirmation from the QBist physicists in question stating whether their beliefs align with the author's corrections or with the descriptions given in the critiqued papers.
read the original abstract
I correct two misapprehensions, one historical and one conceptual, in the recent literature on extensions of the Wigner's Friend thought-experiment. Perhaps fittingly, both concern the accurate description of some quantum physicists' beliefs by others.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript claims to correct two misapprehensions—one historical and one conceptual—in the recent literature on extensions of the Wigner's Friend thought-experiment. Both misapprehensions concern the accurate description of some quantum physicists' beliefs by others, specifically in relation to QBism and Assumption (Q).
Significance. If the author's interpretations of the cited literature prove accurate, the note would contribute to clearer scholarly communication in quantum foundations by reducing the risk of propagating inaccurate characterizations of positions such as QBism. Its significance is primarily clarificatory rather than advancing new formal results, predictions, or empirical tests.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] The central claim that two specific misapprehensions exist in the literature is load-bearing and rests entirely on the accuracy of the author's reading of others' work. The manuscript provides no direct quotations, page references, or detailed summaries of the statements being corrected, preventing independent verification of the mismatch between the literature's claims and the physicists' actual beliefs.
- [Abstract] The weakest assumption identified in the stress-test note—that the author's reading accurately captures the literature—is not addressed with evidence in the text. Without such substantiation, the corrections cannot be evaluated as sound or proportionate to the claimed errors.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their report and the opportunity to clarify our manuscript. We address each major comment below and indicate revisions to improve verifiability of the claims.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] The central claim that two specific misapprehensions exist in the literature is load-bearing and rests entirely on the accuracy of the author's reading of others' work. The manuscript provides no direct quotations, page references, or detailed summaries of the statements being corrected, preventing independent verification of the mismatch between the literature's claims and the physicists' actual beliefs.
Authors: We agree that direct quotations, page references, and brief summaries of the targeted statements would facilitate independent verification. The revised manuscript will incorporate specific excerpts from the cited works (e.g., the relevant passages on QBism and Assumption (Q) in the Wigner's Friend literature) to make the identified mismatches explicit and checkable. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] The weakest assumption identified in the stress-test note—that the author's reading accurately captures the literature—is not addressed with evidence in the text. Without such substantiation, the corrections cannot be evaluated as sound or proportionate to the claimed errors.
Authors: The note's core contribution is the identification of the two misapprehensions. To meet the referee's concern, the revision will supply the requested textual evidence (quotations and references) so that readers can assess whether our characterizations are accurate and the corrections proportionate. No new formal results are claimed; the paper remains clarificatory. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; paper is external interpretive commentary without derivation chain.
full rationale
The paper is a short note whose central claim is the existence of two specific misapprehensions (historical and conceptual) in the recent Wigner's Friend literature concerning accurate descriptions of QBist beliefs and Assumption (Q). No equations, parameters, predictions, or first-principles derivations appear. The enumerated circularity patterns (self-definitional, fitted-input-as-prediction, self-citation load-bearing, uniqueness imported from authors, ansatz smuggled via citation, renaming known result) do not apply because there is no derivation to reduce to its inputs. The accuracy of the author's reading of cited sources is a correctness issue, not a circularity issue within any claimed derivation. The paper is therefore self-contained as commentary.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Standard domain assumptions about the content and history of QBism and related quantum interpretations.
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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