Transactional Interpretation (TI) is an interpretation of quantum mechanics proposed by physicists John G. Cramer in the 1980s. It is designed to address some of the conceptual problems related to the standard Copenhagen interpretation, particularly the role of the observer and the nature of wave function collapse. The central idea of the Transactional Interpretation is that quantum events involve a "handshake" between waves traveling forward in time and those traveling backward in time.
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