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by madhadron 1791 days ago
Wave function collapse is a convenience for calculation. There is, as far as I know, no reason to think it is real.
1 comments

The wave function collapse is quite real in that before measurement a particle interferes with itself and exists in a superposition, and after measurement it doesn't interfere with itself and is not in a superposition (from our perspective, at least).

Does the wave function collapse, or we get entangled with a specific outcome, or something else happens is subject to debate and is the substance of my question.

But "it acts as a wave, then acts as a specific point in space" part is quite real as it's what we observe in experiments.