The (consistent or decoherent) histories interpretation provides a consistent
realistic ontology for quantum mechanics, based on two main ideas. First, a
logic (system of reasoning) is employed which is compatible with the
Hilbert-space structure of quantum mechanics as understood by von Neumann:
quantum properties and their negations correspond to subspaces and their
orthogonal complements. It employs a special (single framework) syntactical
rule to construct meaningful quantum expressions, quite different from the
quantum logic of Birkhoff and von Neumann. Second, quantum time development is
treated as an inherently stochastic process under all circumstances, not just
when measurements take place. The time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation
provides probabilities, not a deterministic time development of the world. The
resulting interpretive framework has no measurement problem and can be used to
analyze in quantum terms what is going on before, after, and during physical
preparation and measurement processes. In particular, appropriate measurements
can reveal quantum properties possessed by the measured system before the
measurement took place. There are no mysterious superluminal influences:
quantum systems satisfy an appropriate form of Einstein locality. This ontology
provides a satisfactory foundation for quantum information theory, since it
supplies definite answers as to what the information is about. The formalism of
classical (Shannon) information theory applies without change in suitable
quantum contexts, and this suggests the way in which quantum information theory
extends beyond its classical counterpart.Comment: Very minor revisions to previous versio