Erwin Schrödinger created quantum wave mechanics in 1925 and summarises his view on the subsequent development into the Copenhagen Interpretation CI in Chapter 1 of Thee Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics (Dublin Seminars 1949-1955):
- Let me say at the outset, that in this discourse, I am opposing not a few special statements of quantum mechanics held today, I am opposing as it were the whole of it, I am opposing its basic views that have been shaped 25 years ago, when Max Born put forward his probability interpretation, which was accepted by almost everybody.
- The view I am opposing is so widely accepted, without ever being questioned, that I would have some difficulties in making you believe that I really, really consider it inadequate and wish to abandon it.
- Hence the idea of point-electrons, whatever it may mean elsewhere, becomes absolutely inadequate ....within the body of an atom.
- To my mind it is patently absurd to call anything the probability of finding an electron near a particular point ... with respect to the nucleus.
- Nobody has ever tried to look for one, nobody ever will; in fact nobody has ever experienced or will ever experiment in this fashion on a single atom of hydrogen or whatnot.
- What astonishes me most is, that this kind of consideration is adopted as the basis of their theory (CI).
- Did Schrödinger contemplate RealQM and dismissed it, or did he simply miss it?
- Hence there can be no shadow of a doubt, that the elementary particles themselves are Planckian ''energy parcels". This is fine.
- But if we now dismiss the idea as too naive, the idea that energy is always exchanged in whole parcels (quanta), if we replace it by resonance view, does this not mean that atomism will go by the board?
- Well no, not atomism, only the corpuscles, the atoms and the molecules, but not atomism. I believe the discrete scheme of proper frequencies/resonances... to be powerful enough to embrace all the actually observed discontinuities in nature for which atomism stood, without our having to enhance them by fictitious discontinuities that are not observed.
- Philosophical considerations about quantum mechanics have gone out of fashion. There is a widespread belief that they have become gratuitous, that everything is all right in this respect for we have been given the marvellously soothing word of complementarity, that it is only the detailed mathematical or physical theory which is still at fault.
- I cannot share this view. In the 20 years of its existence, serious objections have again and again been raised against the current interpretation. Some of them have not been solved but shelved.
- No lesser person than Einstein still withholds his assent. In a letter to Max Born, he formulated his opinion in one marvellously poised sentence:
- "Of this I am firmly convinced that we shall eventually land at a theory in which the things that are linked by laws are not probabilities but imaged facts, as was taken for granted until lately.''