It doesn’t seem like you are asking a question or making an inquiry but if you really do mean to then the possibilities could include both, neither, or something else. Why do I have to pick one or the other?
It doesn’t seem like you are asking a question or making an inquiry
I’m answering a question.
but if you really do mean to then the possibilities could include both, neither, or something else. Why do I have to pick one or the other
Because only you know. We got into the topic because people responded to your OP as though it was ,but you stonewalled them by saying that you didn’t actually support any of the arguments and claims you went to the trouble of citing. At this stage, no one knows how to make an object level response, and no one is making one. Is that what you wanted?
If you were not raising a question, then what is your above question in relation to? If it was a rhetorical question then you worded it in a way that suggests there is a binary choice, somewhere.
If you wrote this at the beginning then we wouldn’t have had to go back and forth.
Your concern is understandable, if you wish to learn more about the fundamentals of the topic you can refer to texts aimed at a general audience.
You didn’t say which though, did you?
Which of what?
“Whether you are asking whether there is a problem with QM, or saying that there is”
It doesn’t seem like you are asking a question or making an inquiry but if you really do mean to then the possibilities could include both, neither, or something else. Why do I have to pick one or the other?
I’m answering a question.
Because only you know. We got into the topic because people responded to your OP as though it was ,but you stonewalled them by saying that you didn’t actually support any of the arguments and claims you went to the trouble of citing. At this stage, no one knows how to make an object level response, and no one is making one. Is that what you wanted?
If you were not raising a question, then what is your above question in relation to? If it was a rhetorical question then you worded it in a way that suggests there is a binary choice, somewhere.