My New Challenge to All Bell-Believers
Posted: Fri Jan 03, 2020 1:55 pm
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Some of you are aware of my old challenge to all Bell-believers. No one has met that challenge to this day. But now I have a much simpler challenge that should be quite easy to meet.
The following is a typical table that even I --- a naive theorist --- can understand. This is the table all the Bell-test experimenters are supposed to be producing in their experiments:
I ask all Bell-believers to simply fill this table out with actual experimental data (no cheating!). I would be delighted if someone can provide data, in the exact form of the above table, for some number n of the total runs of a Bell-test experiment. Ideally, it would be nice to have the actual data for at least n =1,000. But I will be perfectly happy if you provide actual data for, say, n = 1 to 10, in the exact form of the above table. Also, you are free to keep both Alice's parameter "a" and Bob's parameter "b" at fixed values for the entire experiment, or for all runs.
That is it. That is my challenge. It should be quite easy for some of the readers of this forum to meet this challenge. I know that some of you know quite a bit about the actual experiments and the data they collect. I myself know very little about the actual experiments and the data they collect. But the above table is not difficult to understand and should be easy to fill out.
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Some of you are aware of my old challenge to all Bell-believers. No one has met that challenge to this day. But now I have a much simpler challenge that should be quite easy to meet.
The following is a typical table that even I --- a naive theorist --- can understand. This is the table all the Bell-test experimenters are supposed to be producing in their experiments:
I ask all Bell-believers to simply fill this table out with actual experimental data (no cheating!). I would be delighted if someone can provide data, in the exact form of the above table, for some number n of the total runs of a Bell-test experiment. Ideally, it would be nice to have the actual data for at least n =1,000. But I will be perfectly happy if you provide actual data for, say, n = 1 to 10, in the exact form of the above table. Also, you are free to keep both Alice's parameter "a" and Bob's parameter "b" at fixed values for the entire experiment, or for all runs.
That is it. That is my challenge. It should be quite easy for some of the readers of this forum to meet this challenge. I know that some of you know quite a bit about the actual experiments and the data they collect. I myself know very little about the actual experiments and the data they collect. But the above table is not difficult to understand and should be easy to fill out.
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