What..no dismissive comments at all?!!
Sorry, I missed it.
No one saying....'Oh... we knew all that already...nothing new' or 'so what?...the 'normal' world has only one objective reality' or 'so...you think God is responsible!' or 'that's all been rubbished by so and so' or 'its not really what you think it is...'......
Well, it's not quite what the pop-science article says it is; they missed out a lot of caveats. The paper itself (
pdf) makes clear that
if you accept their definition of an observer, and
if you accept locality, and
if you accept "free" choices, and
if you accept that QM is complete and accurate,
then measurements are not absolute but relative to the observer. The first and last conditions being the most controversial. Their "observers" were actually quantum scale particle states - which kind of ignores most of the aspects of the
measurement problem.
The philosophical implications of how such peculiar quantum behavior can lead to what we experience as a predictable 'normal' world, is quite staggering...
It's more of a scientific problem than a philosophical one, and it's not a new idea - the "Wigner's friend" thought experiment, on which it's based, was proposed in the 1960s. We already have tests of Bell's inequalities (since 1980s, IIRC), that tell us that
locality and
realism (observables having values independent of observations) are incompatible with QM.
We still don't fully understand exactly how QM gives rise to the classical world. That isn't news. This is an interesting result but it's been popularised to make it seem more significant than it is.