On 11/10/2024 12:46 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:


On Sunday, November 10, 2024 at 12:03:59 AM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:




    On 11/9/2024 6:40 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:


    On Saturday, November 9, 2024 at 5:52:16 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:




        On 11/9/2024 3:26 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:


        On Saturday, November 9, 2024 at 1:25:32 PM UTC-7 Brent
        Meeker wrote:




            On 11/9/2024 10:00 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:


            On Saturday, November 9, 2024 at 4:39:37 AM UTC-7 John
            Clark wrote:

                On Fri, Nov 8, 2024 at 9:40 PM Alan Grayson
                <[email protected]> wrote:


                            />>> Why do you characterize the
                            explanation of the possible
                            insufficiency of our concept of space,
                            a NON-local hidden variable?/


                        *>> Because if an event occurred 4 light
                        years away and happened LESS than 4 years
                        ago and yet it still affected you then that
                        affect was non-local, because that's what
                        "non-local" means. Is such an affect
                        possible, does Quantum Mechanics permit it?
                        Nobody knows, but if I were betting I would
                        bet not.*


                    /> Your first sentence requires IMO, more
                    precision. Please re-write it./


                *No.*

                    >Are you referring to faster-than-SoL phenomenom?


                Obviously.


            You're too cocky. No. Not faster than SoL, but
            instantaneous. Entangled particles are non-separable. AG
            Anything faster than light is instantaneous in some
            reference frame; and goes in either direction depending
            on the reference frame.  Which is a good reason for
            supposing no information can be transmitted FoL.

            Brent


        That's one data point. Another is the fact that neither
        member of an entangled pair has a preexisting spin before
        measurement,
        I know you mean no fixed spin direction before measurement,
        but it does have a spin because when you measure it you never
        get zero spin.

        and that when one of a pair is measured, the other seems to
        know that value is regardless of the perceived separation
        distance.
        The the way to look at is that there was only one spin state
        from the beginning, when the pair was created.  They shared
        this value in Hilbert space.


    Yes, I am aware of that. AG

        Nothing "traveled" between them.

        So it's reasonable to say we don't know what the hell is
        going on. AG
        We do know exactly what's going on.  We get the empirically
        correct prediction for every experiment.  It's just not a
        nursery story about little balls.  Five hundred years ago
        someone with your attitude would be demanding to know what
        spirit caused the measuring instrument needle to move. You've
        just gotten used to mathematical explanations involving
        little balls bouncing around so you don't question Newtonian
        mathematics.  You need to update your intuition.

        Brent


    Then you must believe that EM waves are continuous because ME's
    predict it?
    Why should I when QM predicts otherwise and correctly predicts
    things Maxwell's equations don't?

    Should I update my intuition so it conforms to your illusion;
    No you should update your intuition so it conforms the currently
    most accurate known theory.

    namely, that you actually know what's going, and no less than
    *exactly*? This is hubris in its purist form. In fact, in this
    context you know nothing. You suffer the illusion of thinking
    some reference to Hilbert space vectors is somehow dispositive of
    the mystery. AG
    An you think you can't know anything until it conforms to your
    prejudices.

    Brent


Can you cite any peer reviewed article on Bell experiments which supports your opinion, that there's no mystery in the results since each pair of entangled entities shares a common vector in Hilbert space? AG

I didn't say there's "no mystery".  I said we correctly predict every experiment.  My point is that there is no more mystery than in say Newtonian gravity.  When are you going to answer my question, "What would you consider an answer that eliminates the mystery?" Little green men?

Brent.

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