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JesseM said:No, it most certainly is not predicted by Malus' law which is not about multiple photons (or light beams) measured by separate polarizers, but rather about a single light beam going through two polarizers in succession (or a single pre-polarized beam going through a single polarizer) as I already explained ...
There two differences between Aspect and Malus experiments. First difference is in intensity of light (light beam vs. individual photons). The second difference is that Aspect measures two “perfectly” correlated photons that mirror each other, but the result of this experiment should be the same (cos^2 correlation) as Malus’ experiments with one polarizer for consecutive polarized photons.
It is why the result of Aspect’s experiment is fully predictable from Malus law.
JesseM said:Big surprise, you've been "convinced" of the ignorant opinion you've kept repeating from the very beginning, even though others have already told you, over and over again, that this is complete nonsense (Bell's argument does not assume anything specific about the nature of particles, including whether they behave deterministically, it only uses the basic premises of local realism which I outlined here).
From BELL’S THEOREM : THE NAIVE VIEW OF AN EXPERIMENTALIST (page 13)
“…The second considered hypothesis is determinism. As a matter of fact, the
formalism of section 3.1 is deterministic: once λ is fixed, the results A(λ,a) and B(λ,b) of the polarization measurements are certain.”
Please let me know if you have more questions.
I do understand “your local realism” that implies that there are predetermined results for each measurement. Now, do you understand why this deterministic (predetermined results) model is in the “spirit of Einstein’s ideas? I don’t.JesseM said:…You continually ignore all the explanations and questions people put to you (like my repeated question about whether you understand why local realism implies that there are predetermined results for each measurement axis)…
Now I belief that I understand the most important about Bell's theorem, mostly by carefully reading Bell’s and Aspect’s original papers. At the same time I don’t think I can learn from you as long as you provide the explanation similar to one you gave for local realism in your post #55 (as shown below).JesseM said:…so it kind of seems like you think you already know everything important about Bell's theorem and have no interest in actually learning anything about it from your dialogue here. )…
And I have no choice but ignore these explanations, partially because of your unfriendly mentoring attitudes.JesseM said:1. The complete set of physical facts about any region of spacetime can be broken down into a set of local facts about the value of variables at each point in that regions (like the value of the electric and magnetic field vectors at each point in classical electromagnetism)
2. The local facts about any given point P in spacetime are only causally influenced by facts about points in the past light cone of P, meaning if you already know the complete information about all points in some spacelike cross-section of the past light cone, additional knowledge about points at a spacelike separation from P cannot alter your prediction about what happens at P itself (your prediction may be a probabilistic one if the laws of physics are non-deterministic)
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