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Dear Cristi,
Thanks for your comments. I also read your lovely essay and was very favorably impressed by it. I included a few comments on the thread below your paper.
The link to my paper from the DICE Conference is Chaos and the Quantum. This paper includes a number of references your might find useful, although the idea of nonlinear influences in quantum mechanics is very much in an early, empirical stage.
I think in principle we are saying much of the same thing in that nonlinear equations can be represented by (many, many more) linear equations of higher order. But, of course, this quickly becomes cumbersome. For all practical purposes chaos theory was unknown when the formulators of quantum mechanics were active, so they forced it into a linear format. One of my favorite quotations comes from Mielnik [Phys. Lett. A289, 1 (2001)], when he was worrying about the superluminal signals that ensued when he was working on (weak!) nonlinear effects:
"I cannot help concluding that we do not know truly whether or not QM generates superluminal signals--or perhaps, it resists embedding into too narrow a scheme of tensor products. After all, if the scalar potentials were an obligatory tool to describe the vector fields, some surprising predictions could as well arise! ...the nonlinear theory would be in a peculiar situation of an Orwellian 'thoughtcrime' confined to a language in which it cannot even be expressed. ...A way out, perhaps, could well be a careful revision of all traditional concepts..."
I often wonder what Wheeler himself, had he been working several decades later, would have done with modern chaos theory. (Although it was known more or less outside of meteorology starting in the 1970's and 1980's, it was by no means widely disseminated among most main-stream physicists -- I hesitate to label Wheeler as a "main-stream" physicist! And it was well into the 1990's, with the growth of quantum information theory that anyone started to think seriously about applying it to the basics of quantum mechanics.) Wheeler was so responsive to new, novel ideas that I suspect he might have run with it.
I found your paper so interesting that I have located many of your other papers, and I would like to continue our discussion after I have had time to peruse and understand them more thoroughly.
Best wishes,
Bill