What do You think about it?
In QM the particles are quantum-mechanically smeared. This is
described with the corresponding formfactors.
These form-factors (elastic and inelastic) are measurable. The
inclusive cross section (sum of all elastic ans inelastic cross
sections) is very close to an elastic cross section of scattering off
a point-like particle. So the classical notion of point-like particle
is a rough, inclusive, illusory picture. Knowing that, it is not
necessary to "derive" QM from CM with help of hidden or explicit
additional variables. QM is self-sufficient. See, for example,
http://arxiv.org/abs/0806.2635.
> What do You think about it?
1.) That QM does not have to lead to indeterminism is already known
and proven by de Broglie-Bohm pilot wave theory.
2.) Very different from your claim about it, the pilot wave does not
"go into the future to chood current behaviour", but evolves
(following the Schroedinger equation) in the same way as the guided
configuration.
3.) While you mention Bell's inequalities, it is not seen how your
theory avoids their conclusions. Realistic models in Bell's sense
certainly include also four-dimensional theories of the world (else,
nobody would care about them - almost all physicists are
relativists).
4.) In fig. 1b it looks like past and future are confused.
5.) fig 10: what have myons to do with alpha-particles and pions? In
the SM they are completely unrelated.
6.) I see you reject the quark model. Means, you will have an
extremely hard job to save all the evidence in favor of it. I think
the status of the quark model is already of the type that the theory
has to survive as an approximation in any viable future theory and
would not spend time on alternatives.