gill1109 wrote:The conclusion:
Schmidt et al wrote:As an alternative to a quantum mechanical description of the slits, our results show that a classical description of the slits according to Einstein’s original viewpoint of the thought experiment is still possible. In that case one has, however, to assume a delocalized nonclassical interaction.
In other words, a classical explanation is possible, but it needs non-locality.
Richard, not only is that statement self-contradictory it doesn't add anything to the discussion. If it needs non-locality, it is not classical. Besides, I already pointed out in my post of the experiment that the authors prefer a mystical explanation.
The authors of the very first paper John cited also make claims about the results which a detailed evaluation of the results reveal to be false. It is naive to simply point to the opinion of the authors, which I already mentioned in my original post about the experiment, as "proof" that non-locality is the only explanation. Look at the results and convince yourself that it is impossible to explain it as I've done, before you jump on the "non-locality" bandwagon. Unless you are already on it or it's sibling ("non-realism").
You actually have to think carefully about their arguments, and ask hard questions of whether their results justify the conclusions, and whether they are making syllogistic fallacies of reasoning about the results. E.g. Do they make conclusions about all possible local explanations based on the failure of a halfhearted attempt at one specific classical explanation? etc. Unfortunately, critical thought is seriously lacking in science these days, hence the proliferation of mysticism like "non-locality".
A simple question I've been asking, lifts the veil just a little bit:
Does anyone suggesting that this experiment is "non-local" believe that the dynamics of Newton's cradle is a non-local phenomenon?