Ken,
Your essay, and your clear framing of the NSU and LSU was the intellectual equivalent of getting hit with a Taser. Coming from having spent years building a Schrodinger-based conceptual framework, I went into a kind of mental paralysis after reading your essay.
I've long intuited that least-action must be one of the most fundamental aspects of Nature, with *something* akin to a Wheeler-Feynman absorber mechanism, but there seemed to be little room for this in the Schrodinger frameworks. I did quick reads of every arxiv paper of yours and am still absorbing the contents.
As this is the end-game for this contest, I'm not expecting a reply, but felt it worth tossing out the few things to consider:
1) If you are in need of arguments in support of LSU, the fact that many EPR experiments utilize transparent materials, which from Feynman's QED explanations seem very likely be similar to the laser-cavities you bring up. It has often bugged me that fragile entanglements are not destroyed by all the quantum jumping up and down in a lens or a beam splitter, and yet EPR papers also state that 'any interaction with the environment' destroys entanglement. (My essay is a bit of a disaster, but I was quite clear that passing through a beamsplitter is fundamentally different than a measurement ... LSU might help understand why!)
3) If you haven't already, it might be interesting to see how LSU applies to such beasts as Cooper Pairs in superconductors. When proposing new viewpoints, or testing new theories, my motto is Think Crazy, Prove Yourself Wrong. The faster you can break your own model, the faster you learn how to fix it. Since discovering that Cooper Pairs have spatial separation, but correlation, I have found them a good place to test concepts. This will either strengthen the LSU, or cause head scratching!
I'm not completely sold on the LSU, but that could well be because it has been almost a month since I've read your paper, and I'm still feeling the effects of being tasered by the mathematical gymnastics required to internalize the impact.
I look forward to following your research and think your concepts, at the bare minimum, provide a *much* needed new perspective for fostering debate.
Dean