
Robinson's Podcast 270 - Tim Maudlin & Jacob Barandes: The Indivisible Approach to Quantum Theory
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Feb 15, 2026 Tim Maudlin, philosopher of physics at NYU known for work on quantum foundations, and Jacob Barandes, Harvard physicist-philosopher who developed the Indivisible Approach, discuss core quantum puzzles. They explore the reality of the wave function, non‑Markovian versus hidden‑variable models, causality and the Markov condition, interference as a feature of indivisible processes, and how classicality and detectors emerge.
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Disentangle Markov Meanings
- Carefully distinguish stochastic Markovity from causal Markovity when reasoning about quantum foundations.
- Avoid conflating causal screening-off with dynamical divisibility across different modeling frameworks.
Hamilton–Jacobi Prefigures Waves On Configuration Space
- The Hamilton–Jacobi function in classical mechanics is non-local on configuration space and guides particle motion like a wave-phase.
- This historical math motivated Schrödinger's move to wave mechanics on configuration space.
Quantum Lacks Meriological Consistency
- Maudlin stresses nomological and meriological self-consistency: Newtonian and Bohmian theories let you describe wholes and parts consistently.
- Textbook quantum mechanics lacks a general non-contingent rule for subsystem dynamics.






