Although quantum states nicely express interference effects, outcomes of
experimental trials show no states directly; they indicate properties of
probability distributions for outcomes. We prove categorically that probability
distributions leave open a choice of quantum states and operators and
particles, resolvable only by a move beyond logic, which, inspired or not, can
be characterized as a guess. By recognizing guesswork as inescapable in
choosing quantum states and particles, we free up the use of particles as
theoretical inventions by which to describe experiments with devices, and
thereby replace the postulate of state reductions by a theorem. By using the
freedom to invent probe particles in modeling light detection, we develop a
quantum model of the balancing of a light-induced force, with application to
models and detecting devices by which to better distinguish one source of weak
light from another. Finally, we uncover a symmetry between entangled states and
entangled detectors, a dramatic example of how the judgment about what light
state is generated by a source depends on choosing how to model the detector of
that light.Comment: 30 pages, 4 figs, LaTeX; new Introduction; new material in Secs. 4 &
5; new Sec. 6; 1 new figure, added reference