FrediFizzx wrote:But I think you really could make a better attempt at a full understanding of the math. How come it all looks just fine to me and I understand it perfectly well? Personally, I like best a combination of the Geometric Algebra version with version 2.0. Having that e_0 original vector helps the understanding of the GA model. So how does that relate to the Pearle version? See... I'm trying to drive the discussion somewhat back on topic.
How come you understand it all, while I know for sure that it is a failure? I think the difference is what I would call "mathematical discipline". I'm a mathematician. Fred and Joy are physicists. For a physicist, mathematics is just the language which he or she uses to describe nature. He or she has recourse to physical insight, physical intuition, and of course, the final arbiter is experiment; it's nature. So if the abstract mathematics which seems to be implied by the physicist's discourse actually does not track the discourse, then mathematics is at fault. The physicist knows what they want to say and finds simply that so far mathematician's attempts to provide the tools to say what they have to say, has been inadequate.
Why I am still interested in Joy's model? I am not interested in it at all, as a model of quantum entanglement.
I am interested in geometric algebra, and I'm interested in possible connections between the algebra of S^3 and of S^7 to quantum physics.
I am interested in computer simulations of local hidden variables theories, and I have contributed to our understanding of the limits of such simulations.
I'm interested in science outreach. How come no science journalist has shown any understanding at all of Bell's theorem? How come every year a new c****pot theory is launched, sometimes gets some attention in the media, and is then silently forgotten again? Why do people believe weird things? In particular, how come especially smart people are able to believe particularly weird things? The psychology and the sociology.
How could a well-known and respected, senior quantum optics researcher (member of the Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences), do an experiment and get it published in one of the top journals, in which he reports violation of Tsirelson's bound, hence definitive disproof of quantum mechanics, without anyone noticing that something odd is going on?
How could another well-known and respected, younger, senior quantum optics researcher do a GHZ experiment and tell reporters (who believed every word) that the data of just a finite number of runs of his experiment disproved local realism? When just a finite number of runs of his own experiment proved that he had not actually got the GHZ state at all - he obtained some "impossible" outcomes!
There is something badly wrong with most physicists' understanding of logic and mathematics. It doesn't stop the top experimentalists from doing brilliant experiments, but I am worried about physics education and the public's understanding of what physicsts are doing, if the physicists themselves have clearly no idea at all.
Why are really smart people like Michel Fodje and Joy Christian, who claim to be scientists, so blinded by their own prior beliefs that they refuse even to start to think about some logical consequences of selecting rows at random from an Nx4 spreadsheet?
[quote="FrediFizzx"]But I think you really could make a better attempt at a full understanding of the math. How come it all looks just fine to me and I understand it perfectly well? Personally, I like best a combination of the Geometric Algebra version with version 2.0. Having that e_0 original vector helps the understanding of the GA model. So how does that relate to the Pearle version? See... I'm trying to drive the discussion somewhat back on topic.[/quote]
How come you understand it all, while I know for sure that it is a failure? I think the difference is what I would call "mathematical discipline". I'm a mathematician. Fred and Joy are physicists. For a physicist, mathematics is just the language which he or she uses to describe nature. He or she has recourse to physical insight, physical intuition, and of course, the final arbiter is experiment; it's nature. So if the abstract mathematics which seems to be implied by the physicist's discourse actually does not track the discourse, then mathematics is at fault. The physicist knows what they want to say and finds simply that so far mathematician's attempts to provide the tools to say what they have to say, has been inadequate.
Why I am still interested in Joy's model? I am not interested in it at all, as a model of quantum entanglement.
I am interested in geometric algebra, and I'm interested in possible connections between the algebra of S^3 and of S^7 to quantum physics.
I am interested in computer simulations of local hidden variables theories, and I have contributed to our understanding of the limits of such simulations.
I'm interested in science outreach. How come no science journalist has shown any understanding at all of Bell's theorem? How come every year a new c****pot theory is launched, sometimes gets some attention in the media, and is then silently forgotten again? Why do people believe weird things? In particular, how come especially smart people are able to believe particularly weird things? The psychology and the sociology.
How could a well-known and respected, senior quantum optics researcher (member of the Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences), do an experiment and get it published in one of the top journals, in which he reports violation of Tsirelson's bound, hence definitive disproof of quantum mechanics, without anyone noticing that something odd is going on?
How could another well-known and respected, younger, senior quantum optics researcher do a GHZ experiment and tell reporters (who believed every word) that the data of just a finite number of runs of his experiment disproved local realism? When just a finite number of runs of his own experiment proved that he had not actually got the GHZ state at all - he obtained some "impossible" outcomes!
There is something badly wrong with most physicists' understanding of logic and mathematics. It doesn't stop the top experimentalists from doing brilliant experiments, but I am worried about physics education and the public's understanding of what physicsts are doing, if the physicists themselves have clearly no idea at all.
Why are really smart people like Michel Fodje and Joy Christian, who claim to be scientists, so blinded by their own prior beliefs that they refuse even to start to think about some logical consequences of selecting rows at random from an Nx4 spreadsheet?