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wm
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DrChinese said:So what if an observation perturbs a system under study? That in no ways explains anything, and it certainly does not explain Bell test results. This is pure hand-waving, and is just as true in the classical world.
Hand-waving?
I had the impression that Bell thought (counter-factually) that an unmeasured system had the property that would have been revealed IF that system had been measured.
That is why he endorsed ''the d'Espagnat move'' mentioned by me here earlier. Thus:
wm said:I'd like to encourage you in the view that: It surely makes more sense to get rid of pseudo-realism (= limited realism = Bellian realism) than locality.
Thus Bell once strongly endorsed a derivation of his inequalities by d'Espagnat (Sci. Am. November 1979). In it you find this move:
"These conclusions require a subtle but important extension of the meaning assigned to the notation A+. Whereas previously A+ was merely one possible outcome of a measurement made on a particle, it is converted by this argument into an attribute of the particle itself.'' (Emphasis added.)
In my view, most quantum objects are perturbed by ''measurement'' and that is why Bellian Inequalities are breached by quantum objects! Bellian realism being of very limited validity.
PS: As I recall, Bell said he could do no better than d'Espagnat!
wm
DrC, Are you saying that Bellian Inequalities are based on measurement perturbation?
Regards, wm