English

Quantum interpretations, causality and quantum computation

Quantum Physics 2026-05-26 v2

Abstract

The interpretation of quantum mechanics continues to be debated, and quantum nonlocality accentuates the puzzle. Quantum interpretations can be classified broadly into two types: realist interpretations, which assert that quantum states describe objective reality (even if hidden or branching), and subjective interpretations, which treat quantum states as observer-dependent information or beliefs about the system. Here we study the implication of quantum interpretations for causal explanations of Bell nonlocal correlations, and show that a given interpretation type carries an inherent commitment to a preferred causal structure. Specifically, we find that realist interpretations entail a classical causal model, and thus require Fine-Tuning to prevent superluminal signaling, while subjective interpretations are found to entail a framework of nonclassical causal models. The implications of our results for one-way quantum computation and computation-based Bell nonlocality are studied.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2405.03657,
  title  = {Quantum interpretations, causality and quantum computation},
  author = {Vivek Kumar and M. P. Singh and R. Srikanth},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2405.03657},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

8 pages, 4 figures