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There are several posts under   [quantum-interpretations] epistemic ontological,   but I'm not seeing an answer to my question there (nor from google searches)...

I hadn't thought about it very much, but I'd always thought it's simply that   mixtures are epistemic   whereas   superpositions are ontological.   So it's not really a matter of interpretation, just a matter of preparation.

But there's so much discussion about epistemic/ontological that this must be way too naive an understanding (or a complete misunderstanding). So how is it that epistemic/ontological is more foundational than just mixture/superposition? Are there any related arXiv (or other) articles?

Qmechanic
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I do not consider mixed states produced by a partial trace, since I do not think you are intersted in this case.

Consider $N= N_1+N_2$ copies of a given physical system. The first $N_1$ are prepared in the pure state $\psi_1$, the remaining $N_2$ are prepared in the pure stste $\psi_2$. Now mix the systems, e.g. for photons, collect all photons, simultaneously, in a given circuit. The mixed state representing the ensemble is $$\rho:= p_1 |\psi_1\rangle \langle \psi_1| + p_2 |\psi_2\rangle \langle \psi_2| \tag{1}$$ where $$p_i:= N_i/N\:,\quad i= 1,2\:.$$ Suppose that $\langle \psi_1|\psi_2\rangle \neq 0$. Since $\rho$ is selfadjoint, it can be decomposed along the basis of its eigenvectors $$\rho = \sum_j q_j |\phi_j\rangle \langle \phi_j|\:.\tag{2}$$ This new decomposition cannot coincide with the previous one because here $\langle\phi_i|\phi_j\rangle =0$ if $i\neq j$. In principle, we can prepare the ensemble by mixing the pure states $\phi_i$ with the weights $q_i$. So also (2) is a possible practical way to produce the final mixed state $\rho$

Once the mixture has been created. All possible information we can experimentally get from the ensemble is of the form $tr(\rho P)$, where $P$ is any test on the system (orthogonal projector). So, there is no way to decide how the system was prepared: if according to (1) or (2).

In view of this fact it is difficult to argue that mixed states (prepared as above by a direct simultaneous mixing in a given region of space) are epistemic and pure states are ontic.