- #71
Lynch101
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Apologies for the repetition. I was trying to delineate what I saw as a key difference but it is one that you allude to below.Paul Colby said:You keep repeating this and people here keep reinforcing this. It's a non-sensical statement, IMO.
It might help if I outline, by way of a crude example, the point I am trying to make on this particular point. It might offer insight into where I am going wrong.Paul Colby said:Now that said, Bell's theorem is a statement about the statistics of measurement.
If we imagine the crudest of crude quantum experiments where we have a black box with two screens at either end, divided into two panels, the top (or up) panel and the bottom (or down) panel. There is a button that we can press and a little while after pressing the button a flash of light appears on each screen on the end. The flashes of light always appear in opposite panels - if the flash appears on the up panel on the left screen then the flash on the right screen will always appear in the down panel, and vice versa.
If the mathematical formalism only tells us the probability of each flash, where it appears, and their always being in opposite panels then it doesn't appear to tell us what is happening inside the box. We can reasonably ask the question, what is happening inside the box.
OK, so we cannot assign predefined values to what is happening inside the box but surely there must be something happening inside the box and it must have some properties, in some sense of the word - even if they aren't predefined values.Paul Colby said:One uses measurements and statistics of those measurements showing that predefined values for a system can't exist.
If we say yes, there is something happening inside the box but the mathematical formalism only gives us information about the measurement outcomes, then this would seem to suggest that there are hidden-variables in the box that the mathematics doesn't describe.
My understanding is that the anti-realist position must say that there is nothing whatsoever happening inside the box because the alternative would be that there are realistic hidden-variables.Paul Colby said:Okay, that not the same as the system doesn't exist or the system can't interact or the system isn't real.
I think the idea that these hidden variables must have predefined values is a sticking point. If we drop the idea of the properties inside the box having predefined values then we are left with unqauntified properties, or what I am inclined to think are hidden-variables.