On Sun, Nov 10, 2024 at 6:51 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

*>>  maybe things are realistic, maybe an entangled pair of electrons has
> ONE AND ONLY ONE spin axis before a measurement. But maybe that's false,
> maybe an entangled pair has EVERY axis spin that is not forbidden by the
> quantum wave before a measurement. *
>
>
> *> I thought the choice of measurement axis is arbitrary, and any axis can
> be used. AG*
>

*It is completely arbitrary, but whatever arbitrary access you choose to
measure you seem to endow that particular axis, out of the infinite number
of other axes you could have chosen, as being special. And that seems very
strange, especially because in most quantum interpretations the definition
of the word "measurement" is extremely murky. The one exception is Many
Worlds, in it a measurement is simply a change. *

*To me it seems like experiments are virtually shouting that Many Worlds is
true, and it's the simplest explanation; unlike objective collapse it
doesn't need to add a new term to Schrodinger's Equation that makes it
non-deterministic. And unlike pilot wave it doesn't need a second extremely
complicated equation, in addition to Schrodinger's Equation, that does
nothing but keep track of which world is "real" and which one is not. You
have to work very hard to get rid of those Many Worlds that are an inherent
consequence of Schrodinger's Equation and for that reason some have called
pilot wave the Disappearing Worlds Theory.  *

*S**o why hasn't Many Worlds been the dominant interpretation since the
1920s? I think there are two reasons, both of them emotional, neither of
them logical. *

*1) It can't be right because it would make the universe too big. Strangely
this sentiment is expressed even among those who insist that the universe
is infinite. *

*2) It can't be right because I never feel myself splitting. This is
similar to the objection that Galileo heard, the Earth can't be moving
because I don't feel myself moving. *


> *>> The violation of Bell's Inequality cannot rule out either possibility.
> We do know that IF the world is realistic THEN it cannot be both local and
> deterministic. We also know that you will never measure the spin of an
> electron to be zero or one because that is forbidden by the quantum wave,
> instead you will always get 1/2 [or -1/2] because the quantum wave demands
> that. *
>
>
> *> CMIIAW, but I think Bell experiments are done this way; an entangled
> pair of electrons are created with zero net spin, and sent in opposite
> directions, far beyond causal distance.*
>

*You are correct except that they used correlated photons and polarizing
filters instead of electrons and Stern Gerlach magnets (which measure
spin), they could've used electrons but they use photons because they are
easier to deal with experimentally than electrons. *

*If 2 billion years ago a correlated pair of photons was created, and 1
billion years later I randomly pick an axis (let's call that 0 degrees) and
set my polarizing filter to that axis, then regardless of which axis I
choose there is a 50% chance the photon will make it through and a 50%
chance it will not, let's suppose it does not. One billion years later you
arbitrarily pick an axis and you set your polarizing filter to that axis.
If you just happen to pick the same axis I did there is a 100% chance the
other in entangled photon will make it through your filter, but if for
example the axis that you picked is 30 degrees different than mine then
there is only a 75% chance your photon will make it through your filter;
this is because  [COS (X)]^2 =0.75 if  X = 30 DEGREES (π/6 radians).*

* > I don't YET know how Bell's inequality is derived*


*I tried to explain that to you in a very long post.  Basically I showed
that if you use that [COS (X)]^2 rule (see above) about polarized light,
which has been known for centuries, and if the strange behavior in the
quantum world is caused by local hidden variables, then certain
correlations are impossible; however experiments have shown that those
correlations ARE possible, therefore the strange behavior of the quantum
world cannot be due to local hidden variables.   *

* > the Bell experiments suggest transference of information at distances
> exceeding causality. *


*I doubt it's correct but pilot wave theory speculates that an influence
can travel faster than light, but it would be wrong to call that influence
"information". Even if pilot wave is correct, a faster than light telegraph
would still be impossible. *

  *John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>*
eeb

t

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