This is kind of cute.
My personal interpretation of Schrödinger’s equations would traditionally be to deny the actuality of wave function collapse, which is part of the Many-Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics, but I haven’t looked into this or really considered it since I was fourteen (thousand) years old. I thought it was awesome at the time because philosophically it meant that there exists a universe in which all societies operate anarchistically, and if I just invented a proper time machine I could chrono-emigrate there. I figured building a time machine had to be simpler than fixing all the problems we have here and now.
EDIT: This is interesting too. It explains why coordinate transformations in Schrödinger groups are dissimilar to those of Galilean or Poincaré groups, because phase shifts under Lorentz boosts are variant and dependent upon the mass(es) of the particle(s). Thus, in order for the boosts to become covariant, proper time and relativity of simultaneity need to be taken into account and prove central to even non-relativistic quantum mechanics.