Oldofredi, Andrea
2026-01-24T12:28:55Z
2026-01-24T12:28:55Z
2025-04
In this chapter we offer an introduction to weak values from a three-fold perspective: first, outlining the protocols that enable their experimental determination; next, deriving their correlates in the quantum formalism and, finally, discussing their ontological significance according to different quantum theories or interpretations. We argue that weak values have predictive power and provide novel ways to characterise quantum systems. We show that this holds true regardless of ongoing ontological disputes. And, still, we contend that certain “hidden” variables theories like Bohmian mechanics constitute very valuable heuristic tools for identifying informative weak values or functions thereof. To illustrate these points, we present a case study concerning quantum thermalization. We show that certain weak values, singled out by Bohmian mechanics as physically relevant, play a crucial role in elucidating the thermalization time of certain systems, whereas standard expectation values are “blind” to the onset of thermalization.
Chapter or part of a book
Accepted version
English
Filosofia de la matemàtica; Valors (Filosofia); Filosofia de la ciència; Philosophy of mathematics; Values; Philosophy of science
Oxford University Press
Versió postprint del capítol de llibre publicat a: https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2310.03852
Capítol del llibre: Oianguren-Asua, X.; Solé, A.; Destefani, C. F.; Oriols, X. (2025). "How weak values illuminate the role of “hidden” variables as predictive tools". Guiding Waves in Quantum Mechanics: One Hundred Years of de Broglie-Bohm Pilot-Wave Theory. Volum editat per Andrea Oldofredi. Editorial: Oxford University Press (Oxford, Anglaterra), pp.315 – 335. ISBN: 9780198901853
cc by (c) Oianguren-Asua, Xabier et al., 2025
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Filosofia [706]