Re: [Fis] Bell\\\'s inequality: Can we find its classical analogue? Classical and Quantum waves

2006-06-05 Thread John Collier
Professor John Collier Philosophy, University of KwaZulu-Natal Durban 4041 South Africa T: +27 (31) 260 3248 / 260 2292 F: +27 (31) 260 3031 email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Http://ukzn.ac.za/undphil/collier >>> Andrei Khrennikov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 06/05/06 2:54 PM >>> Dear John, > > On a somewhat

Re: [Fis] Addition of probabilities

2006-06-05 Thread Aleks Jakulin
Koichiro Matsuno wrote: However, quantum mechanics interprets the experiments in a Hilbert space. If a physicist picks up a strange Hilbert space, a biological organism may have a curious intersection between being alive and dead there. This is only a problem if one interprets the Hilbert space

[Fis] Last remark o n BellĀ“s theo rem and nonlocality

2006-06-05 Thread Andrei Khrennikov
Hello, These days we have in Vaxjo the conference \"Foundations of Probability and Physics-4\", see http://www.vxu.se/msi/aktuellt/konferens/index.xml There were many talks and discussions including experimenters from leading labs in quantum information. I would like again to remark that

RE: [Fis] Bell\'s inequality: Can we find its classical analogue?Classical and Quantum waves

2006-06-05 Thread Loet Leydesdorff
>One decisive difficulty with the quantum world is with its > limited linguistic accessibility. If one dares to say > something definite about the Q world in third person > description in the present tense, this would come to imply > something definite, whenever and wherever. This form of