Gordon Watson wrote:Richard,
1. My P(A^-B^-) versus P(A = -1),P(B = -1))? Decorations or rigorous and convenient short-cut identifiers?
2. No matter what you want to talk about, say (a, b) or (c, d): it seems to me that Λ_+ and Λ_- are self-determining and clear from the context.
3. Please provide the other abominables that you have in mind. I can then get on with improving things. Thanks
Gordon
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Gordon, I still have no idea what “self determining” means. But more important: I’ve told you the complaints I have with your notations. I suspect most mathematicians would agree with me. You want people like me to read your paper. So this is your problem, not mine.
As “local” points out, and as I agreed, your two pages have zero content, because they do not specify A, B and rho. So there is, so far, nothing to read, nothing to check. So far all we have seen is your attempt to prove the elementary, well known, fact: if X is a random variable which only takes the values +/-1, then E(X) = P(X = 1) - P(X = -1).
You will find it hard to complete the paper. It’s a well known theorem that a triple (A, B, rho) of functions satisfying your conditions does not exist. There is a nice proof by Steven Gull which does not use CHSH at all, which is being being discussed in another thread here. https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/547039/help-understanding-prof-steve-gulls-explanation-of-bells-theorem