Austin Fearnley wrote:Thanks Gordon. I will follow up your references on retrocauality and similarly for those of jreed. I do not like what I have read on retrocausality so far, except in a very general way, but the path I have taken seems to be the same way.
Now for Bell's Theorem which you say I should start with. Local's computer print out is a perfect place to start. It shows that for a=0 and b= approx 45 degrees then Bell correl = approx 0.5. If you have better functions for A and B then try them out to try to achieve correl= - 0.707.
Not using computers is a handicap in this. My own favourite subject was pure maths. But then I took on statistics. And subsequently computing. I learned statistics in the late 60s before computers were generally available. But we managed using paper and pen. And log tables, though engineers preferred slide rules. And the Brunsviga mechanical calculators where to divide you had to whirl (for each and every decimal place calculation) the rotor arm until a bell rang. Then you had to reverse the rotor arm twirl direction a few times. And to perform a square root on the Brunsviga was even more exotic. As a student, to understand that SQRT method better I learned how to calculate square roots and then cube roots by hand.
Using a Brunsviga then makes me appreciate now the convenience and computing power of desktop PCs. From the early 70s, I had access to a mainframe computer using Fortran.
But you could just take a=0, b=45 and p=30 (p for particles) and work out by hand the numerical value of your A and B functions for that one pair of particles.
By Bell's Theorem in normal 3D space using local hidden variables and no loopholes, you will not find functions to give correl = 0.707. Well, I have never managed it and I tried quite a few times using the speed and convenience of modern computers.
A second place to look is the quantum Randi challenge. That shows you that formulae for A and B cannot be deterministic. That is, for a=0 and b=45 degrees the formula for say A must have a random element such that the outcome is sometimes +1 but, on other occasions, the same formula [for the same inputs of a, b and p] yields the outcome -1. So counterfactual determinism does not hold.
So my own retrocausal method does use a random element in the A and B functions. I think of that as the particle always having a (polarisation or gyroscopic) average direction to point at but the direction can [somehow ...] vary systematically, such as by precession, within that overall average direction. I worked out the formula for that statistical envelope of directions by reverse engineering from Malus's Law. So I am using a classical solution.
I do not really have any interest in finding for myself a theoretical proof or disproof of Bell's Theorem since I accept computationally that correl -> 0.5 and not 0.707 when using counterfactual determinism and deterministic formulae for A and B.
Austin, you raise several interesting matters.
1. To be clearer re this: "Now for Bell's Theorem which you say I should start with."
My suggestion was to start with
my refutation of Bell's proof. That is, Bell (1964) relies on his famous inequality Eqn (15).
Via high-school math, I show that his inequality, Eqn (15, is false. [Which does not prove his theorem false, but is a good pointer the the fact that it may be. So I go on to show that it is!]
2. As I understand it, the Quantum Randi challenge prevents/forbids me from using an element of physical reality that I take to be at the heart of the matter.
3. #2 is on the back burner for now.
4. Note that you in someways seem close to the "true realism" component of my core principle of true local realism (TLR). TLR is the union of
true locality (or relativistic causality: no influence propagates superluminally, after Einstein) and
true realism (or non-naive realism: some existents change interactively, after Bohr).
5. I see no reason to abandon TLR
6. NB: I accept all the results of quantum theory. Where you do not accept such: there we differ.
Cheers; Gordon