- #421
SpectraCat
Science Advisor
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zonde said:I will try a bit differently. I understand that analogy is not the best argument but let me use one this time.
Let's consider an experiment.
You and I each take ten pebbles. We arrange them so that we can later identify pairs from our pebbles (say we number them from 1 to 10 and my n-th pebble makes pair with your's n-th pebble).
Now each of us picks one pebble and we compare them and identify if they are from the same pair. If they do not make pair we discard them. If they make a pair then we record whether your pebble is bigger than mine or not.
After that we repeat from start - you and I each take ten pebbles ...
When we have collected some amount of data we find out that your pebble is bigger in almost all cases (or more precisely there is on average one exclusion for every 200 000 successful runs).
Now there are two observers that analyze this data.
Observer A says that this result indicates that your pebbles are bigger than mine.
Observer B says that this result does not indicate anything particular about our pebbles but it shows that I am picking smallest pebble out of my ten but you are picking biggest pebble out of yours.
However observer A insists that he is correct because as he speculates if we modify the experiment so that we take only one pebble instead of ten then we will observe the same result.
Now do you agree with observer A?
What does this prove, other than that one can construct a random example where the free sampling assumption is not valid (in this case because choices of conscious beings are involved, which is hardly apropos of anything in the physical example we are discussing)?
Most significantly, what does it have to do with the Bell theorem? Analogies are only useful to the extent that they draw *clear* parallels between the elements of the physical systems they are created to explain/clarify.