Quantum measurement is traditionally framed as a discontinuous, observer-dependentevent that selects a definite outcome from a superposition. Standard accounts —Copenhagen, Many Worlds, and decoherence theory (Zeh, Zurek) — describe thephenomenon accurately within their domains but do not provide a mechanical origin forthe timing or mechanism of collapse. This paper develops a mechanical reinterpretationwithin the Cohesion Unified Field Theory: collapse is structural time synchronizationbetween a quantum system and the observer’s measuring device. Structural time,defined as the recursion rate of a system’s internal structure, evolves differently forisolated quantum systems (fast recursion, low structural density) and macroscopicdevices (slow recursion, high structural density). Measurement is the boundary eventat which these recursion rates synchronize.The reflective signal account of collapse provides the physical timing: collapsecompletes when the return signal from the quantum system arrives at the device,not at the moment of initial interaction. The selected outcome is the one whoserecursion phase is compatible with the device’s torsion density structure at the momentof synchronization. This restores forward causality, resolves apparent retrocausalparadoxes, and unifies decoherence, entanglement, and measurement under a singlegeometric principle. This is the first account of quantum measurement within theCohesion UFT framework.
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Dexter Gilbert
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Dexter Gilbert (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69f9892215588823dae1801e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19992464