Abstract

In this article the author discusses a version of quantum theory that removes the paradoxes of the microscopic world making quantum information a figment of the imagination. Topics include some bizarre paradoxes of quantum mechanics, such as the appearance of particles in two places at the same time, the development of a model in 2001 by a team of physicists that eliminates quantum paradoxes by combining quantum theory with probability theory and reimaging the wave function, called Quantum Bayesianism (QBism), physicists' use of the wave function to calculate the probability that a particle will have a certain property, and some criticisms of QBism, such as its inability to explain complex macroscopic phenomena in microscopic terms.

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