Dear Steve, [from my essay-thread, in reply] thanks for dropping by and alerting me to your absorbing essay.
The fuller story: "As high seas crashed about you, a black bottle smashed aboard. Seeing the now-revealed message, you transcribed it here as your opening paragraph: not realising that you had discovered the missing introduction to Moby Dick."
Thus does your poetic bent go on to reveal your wide-ranging knowledge of important themes and buzzwords: inviting me to an exciting universe of discourse based on ideas, thoughts, poetry, etc. Alas, for me (an engineer), devoid of mathematics.
It's this last aspect that I seek to address in my essay -- mixing my poor poetry with simple math --- prompting another alas: it's nowhere near as popular as yours.
So please bring your poetry and your heavy-duty know-how to bear on my essay: for I will welcome such to trigger corrections and improvements. Hoping it will help to bring out the best in you, here's some background info.
Background to Wholistic Mechanics (WM)
Whereas QM emerged from the UV-catastrophe ca1905, WM emerges from the locality-catastrophe typified by John Bell's dilemma ca1965: ie, seriously ambivalent about AAD, Bell adamantly rejected locality. He later surmised that maybe he and his followers were being rather silly -- correctly; as we show -- for WM is the local theory that resolves Bell's dilemma [there is no AAD] and proves the Bellian silliness.
So WM begins by bringing just one change to modern physics: rejecting naive-realism, true realism insists that some beables change interactively, after Bohr's disturbance-dictum. Thus recognising the minimum-action associated with Planck's constant, WM then recognises the maximum speed associated with light: for true locality insists that no influence propagates superluminally, after Einstein.
The union of these two classical principles -- the foundation of WM -- is true local realism (TLR). Under TLR, EPR's naive criterion for "an element of physical reality" is corrected, then the Laws of Malus and Bayes are validated in the quantum world. Then, via the R-F theorem ca1915, Born's Law is seen to derive from elementary Fourier theory. This in turn allows us to understand the physical significance of Dirac's notation; etc. Thus, beginning with these elementary natural principles, WM's universe-of-discourse focuses on beables in spacetime: with mathematics taken to be our best logic.
NB: Formulated in 1989 in response to a challenging article by David Mermin (1988), many leading Bellian physicists and philosophers have committed to review the foundations of WM and its early results. Since no such review has ever been delivered, I am not yet aware of any defect in the theory. Further, WM provides many ways to refute Bell's theorem (BT): one such is provided on p.8 of my essay.
PS: To those who dismiss my essay due to an alleged typo in the heading, I follow C. S. Peirce (absent his severity): "It is entirely contrary to good English usage to spell premiss, 'premise,' and this spelling ... simply betrays ignorance of the history of logic."
Assuring you that critical comments are most welcome,
Gordon Watson More realistic fundamentals: quantum theory from one premiss.