And I agree with brother Clark, here:
...the results have nothing definitive to say about QM interpretations.... Except you'll find people who disagree with that. The whole many earth's interpretation was developed to address that issue. Reality is a metaphysical characteristic, not a scientific one.
— T Clark
As to our living in a quantum universe, I buy that. But I accept that most of the effects are too small or too unlikely to matter much. Not impossible, just unlikely.
If you care to lay out your own interpretation, "compelling analogy," I'm a reader! — tim wood
Maybe I'm misreading you, MU. It seems to me you're objecting to the use of the English word "spin" to refer to something meaningful to a technical user as a term of art. If that's the case, why? — tim wood
It seems you fail to distinguish between spin and "spin." Forget the ordinary English word "spin". And for clarity's sake just for you in this post let's call the other spxn. Let's suppose what is actually the case, that certain people use the term that we call here spxn to represent a set of ideas that they have collectively, and that they can convey to each other by speaking and writing the word spxn. In as much as I am not one of those people, I will leave to them the choice of their own words for their own use; and I (shall) assume the the word is efficacious when used by them among themselves. So much for the word"Spin" is a highly deficient concept.... So the property which is represented by "spin" is not adequately represented in this way, — Metaphysician Undercover
There seems a not entirely warranted enthusiasm in your descriptions - which may cause trouble. Let's see if we can ignore it.They matter because they prove with reasonable certainty that we live in a world that does not match up with classical assumptions.... The point of Bell's Theorem and the experiments that test it is to clarify if it's at all possible if we live in a world that's describable classically. — flannel jesus
Which is not the claim that answers impossible in one world are possible in others, or is it? In some worlds do I murder my own parents before I am born? My understanding of many-worlds is that whole entire complete universes flash into and out of existence at every juncture of every instant of the existence of every thing, and that seems unlikely.Many Worlds takes the idea of superposition super-literally, and in many worlds any answer to a quantum question prior to measurement doesn't have a singular definite answer, it has MANY answers. — flannel jesus
The many worlds thing was an aside, and not at all necessary or required to understand everything I'm saying about bells theorem. The stuff I'm saying about bells theorem is entirely agnostic about which interpretation of quantum mechanics is correct.Many Worlds takes the idea of superposition super-literally, and in many worlds any answer to a quantum question prior to measurement doesn't have a singular definite answer, it has MANY answers.
— flannel jesus
Which is not the claim that answers impossible in one world are possible in others, or is it? In some worlds do I murder my own parents before I am born? My understanding of many-worlds is that whole entire complete universes flash into and out of existence at every juncture of every instant of the existence of every thing, and that seems unlikely. — tim wood
So I conclude that QM, in sum, is a model that highlights deficiencies in classical physics but that does not replace classical physics, or, rather instead, becomes it. That is, that QM perfected will be seen to be a classical theory that is an advance on and refinement of current classical theory, in a way as relativity refines and advances on Newtonian physics. — tim wood
I suppose you're free to conclude that but that's certainly not my understanding, or I dare say the understanding of physicists who study qm. — flannel jesus
That is, measurements on single particles allow for a classical interpretation, and on entangled particles, not. — tim wood
And do you not see that it, QM itself, cannot be? Whether you or I can get there isn't my point. There is number that QM can in principle if not in practice generate that just is the probability that your car itself will quantum tunnel from your garage to your ex's garage, instantaneously. Extremely unlikely, although quantum tunneling is observed in the lab. So your car disappears; do you accept and are you satisfied that it disappeared for no reason? That is the price of indeterminacy. And either it is that way or it is not that way. If you hold for indeterminacy, then how, exactly, does anything happen? Not to be confused with the proposition that you and I don't know and are essentially ignorant.QM will always be indeterminate — flannel jesus
Many worlds doesn't disagree with it at all. — flannel jesus
They matter because they prove with reasonable certainty that we live in a world that does not match up with classical assumptions.
T Clark said many people disagree with that and he brought up "many earths", which I assume to be many worlds - please correct me if I'm wrong. Many worlds is quantum mechanics. Many worlds is NOT classical. Many worlds also believes in indeterminate answers to measurement questions prior to measurement. — flannel jesus
The inequalities in Bells Theorem are there to help us test if our universe is one where it's in fact true that we might live in a classical universe where those questions have singular, definite answers. — flannel jesus
to explain it to someone who rejected QM out of the gate, and didn't want to understand the maths and probabilities involved — flannel jesus
↪T Clark my mistake. Your post said some disagree, and then you brought up many worlds in a way that sounded like you think many worlds is an example of disagreement. — flannel jesus
The inequalities in Bells Theorem are there to help us test if our universe is one where it's in fact true that we might live in a classical universe where those questions have singular, definite answers.
— flannel jesus
In my understanding, this is not true. It is your interpretation, not mine and probably not Bell's. The inequalities are not "there to help us," they describe phenomena at very small scales. — T Clark
Finally, in 2015, experiments were performed that demonstrated violation of Bell inequalities with these loopholes blocked. This has consequences for our physical worldview; the conditions that entail Bell inequalities are, arguably, an integral part of the physical worldview that was accepted prior to the advent of quantum mechanics. If one accepts the lessons of the experimental results, then some one or other of these conditions must be rejected.
7. Significance for Quantum Information Theory
The set-up envisaged in the proof of Bell’s theorem highlights a striking prediction of quantum theory, namely, long-distance entanglement, and experimental tests of the Bell inequalities provide convincing evidence that it is a feature of reality. Moreover, Bell’s theorem reveals that the entanglement-based correlations predicted by quantum mechanics are strikingly different from the sort of locally explicable correlations familiar in a classical context.
The quote of mine is just rewording that, where I replace "local hidden variable theories" with the phrase "classical universe where those questions have singular, definite answers." Those phrases may not be perfectly interchangeable, but they are close to interchangeable. — flannel jesus
I don't see how the two phrases are interchangeable at all. — T Clark
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