If it doesn’t fundamentally change quantum mechanics as a theory, is the picture likely to turn out fundamentally different from MWI?
CI/OR is a different picture to MWI, yet neither change QM as a number-crunching theory. You have hit on the fundamental problems of empiricism: the correct interpretation of a data is underdetermined by data, and interpretations can differ radically with small changes in data or no changes in data.
I’m not sure what you mean by OR, but if it refers to Penrose’s interpretation (my guess, because it sounds like Orch-OR), then I believe that it indeed changes QM as a theory.
CI/OR is a different picture to MWI, yet neither change QM as a number-crunching theory. You have hit on the fundamental problems of empiricism: the correct interpretation of a data is underdetermined by data, and interpretations can differ radically with small changes in data or no changes in data.
I’m not sure what you mean by OR, but if it refers to Penrose’s interpretation (my guess, because it sounds like Orch-OR), then I believe that it indeed changes QM as a theory.