I admire your tenacity and your systematic approach.
Gordon Watson wrote:The OP emphasises: that every Paragraph and Equation is numbered; that this thread is for focussed critiques and questions; etc. I could be mistaken, but I don't, at this moment, recall one Para # or one Eqn (.) cited by you?
You are not mistaken.
Gordon Watson wrote:gill1109 wrote: Here is a small data set of a CHSH experiment with N = 4. The format is setting Alice, setting Bob, outcome Alice, outcome Bob1, 1, +1, +1
The four empirical correlations are +1, -1, +1, +1
1, 2, +1, -1
2, 1, -1, -1
2, 2, -1, -1
CHSH: S = 4
I have a LHV model (detection loophole) which gives exactly these 4 correlations however large N.
With a detection loophole? @%$
If you want a loophole-free LHV simulation model to generate an outcome like this (but with large N) you'll have to try many, many times ... but once in a long while it will happen. Probably you'll have to wait longer than the life of the universe if N is at all reasonably large.
Gordon Watson wrote:gill1109 wrote:
My point: the existence of data-sets violating CHSH does not prove Bell's logic is wrong.
Yet that is exactly what you are saying ("experimental violation proves there must be an error")
I trust you mean "experimental data sets" -- and not loophole-based variants? And understand that science advances via both theory and practice working together?
To date, there has been no successful experiment which did not have a big loophole problem.
You don't have to tell me how science progresses.
Gordon Watson wrote:gill1109 wrote:I conclude that your logic is not mine.
A quoted Paragraph number # or Equation (.) from my 2-page-text would be still welcomed by me: with a direct response assured.
I have explained to you that the logic of the opening sentences of the OP (original post?) is (a) defective and (b) shows that you are not well informed concerning experiments which have been done to date: you said "experimental violation proves there must be an error". Moreover Bell explicitly wrote that he expected a loophole-free experiment violating his inequality to get done some day. So he both thought that he had proven a true theorem and he thought that experiment would violate his inequality. How do you explain this lapse in his "logic"? Or doesn't this suggest that you haven't actually grasped what the whole point must be?
Bell proved, given background assumptions, that if A then B. That was a little mathematical theorem. Nothing to do with experiments. Just pure math. But B had not been seen yet, and indeed, it still has't been seen to this day; at least, not when the background assumptions have also been enforced!
He expected that experiment with background assumptions enforced eventually would show "not B". He therefore perfectly logically expected that we were going to have to give up "A".
Actually A can be decomposed as (A1 & A2 & A3). He already knew this too. So if, with background assumptions imposed, experiment shows us that B is wrong, then at least one of A1, A2 and A3 must be false. And this is exactly what Bell has patiently explained time and time again and with great humour and wonderful illustrations.
Since Bell was a "realist" and since he thought "conspiracy" is stupid, he knew perfectly well that he had to give up "locality". So you are attacking Bell but clearly not well informed what Bell actually thought. There has been 50 years of discussion since Bell (1963). Bell himself has lucidly and patiently "solved" many of your issues. You are not the first one to have had these particular misconceptions.
To repeat: I see a lot of problems (a) with your logic (b) with your knowledge of relevant material, and I do also think that I have supported this "opinion" with quite a lot of pretty clear evidence. But sure, we can agree to differ...
Note: background assumptions = event-ready detectors, no non-detections, binary outcomes, ... See Chapters 13 and 16 of Speakable and Unspeakable

