harry wrote:Hello Gordon, I'm back.
Gordon Watson wrote:harry wrote:Hi Gordon,
Hi Harry, and thanks,
harry wrote:As you decided to restart - but with more focus - the topic "Commonsense local realism refutes Bell's theorem", here's a summary of my latest opinion as expressed in that thread:
Apparently you assume that Bell grouped his derivation corresponding to experimental sequence N.
No; not at all: and I don't see why this seems so to you?
A sum can be done in any sequence. But the tests are sequential, numbered like mine or some other way.
So, to help clear this up, please bring these claims into the context of the essay that we are focussing on here now.
OK. The point was not the ordering of the sequence (indeed you are free to change the order) but the sequence itself: the data. As I stressed next by means of an illustration, Bell did
not calculate according to experimental data collection.
Harry; with a BIG welcome back!
Now, since experimental data can be collected any way you like, what do you mean: "Bell did
not calculate according to experimental data collection"?
Are you trying to avoid the following simple fact?
Bell's (14a) delivers the correct experimental results; his (14b)-(15) do NOT.
So: Does this not tell you where he went wrong? Like: (14b) is wrong!?
NB: I make no reference here (on this occasion) to how "Bell did
not calculate according to experimental data collection."
What is relevant is that Bell did not calculate according to the reality of EPRB! If YOU start with an equation representing the experimental reality for EPRB, and YOU finish with one that does NOT: What do YOU conclude?
Time to announce a theorem? Or time to check for errors?
.
harry wrote:[..]
harry wrote: [..] Bell's integral is not over N or t, but over λ. Bell keeps λ constant over each integration step: on purpose one whole line corresponds to a single λ - and not a λi and a different λn+i which have different outcomes.
I'm not following this, at all.
That's a pity, as it is absolutely
necessary to follow it!
Once more, do you understand my illustration here below? If you can follow my illustration then you will likely also follow what we have been saying to you!
So let me follow your illustration IN THE CONTEXT of my essay! You are playing the bisexual role of Alice and Bob combined, right? For YOU know both measurement outcomes; A = 230 cm and B = 240 cm, right? So you THEN get the average as 235 cm, right? So bisexual you has been able to act as coincidence-counter and expectation/average calculator, right?
And here's your MATHS! (A + B)/2 = 235 cm.
But the carpenter is ALSO the (duplicate/backup) coincidence-counter (placing - NB my accuracy here - the short beam on top of the long; and think voltages), duplicating your effort. As well, the carpenter is also the (duplicate/backup) expectation/average calculator in his bi-role, too, right?
So he goes, correctly, as programmed in trade-school: A + (B-A)/2 = (A + B)/2; in readiness for measurement.
Then, given that his coincidence-count and measurement is conducted AFTER the outputs (PLURAL) that you have previously accessed, we have this scene:
As he is about to measure the average directly and correctly, you interrupt with a shouted 235 cm; thereby disrupting the scientific process of having your result independently confirmed!
Does this accurately represent your illustration, IN THE CONTEXT of my essay?
.
harry wrote: Please explain this to me:
What is the physical significance (when studying EPRB) of "Bell keeps λ constant over each integration step: on purpose one whole line corresponds to a single λ"?
NB: Bell allows me to use discrete λ, so I do just that. [..]
I will answer that after you first answer the same about my ilustration here below:
I've been interrupted. So maybe you will get to answer before I get back. I'll try to slip some more meaningful stuff in below, as time permits right now.
Thanks; Gordon
harry wrote:harry wrote:
Here's an illustration. A carpenter determines the average length of two similar beams as follows: He places them on top of each other, puts a mark halfway between the ends of the two beams as follows:
-------------- . . . . x
---------------------------------
Next he measures the length upto the mark of the top beam. I see him do that, and happen to know the lengths of the two beams.
So I calculate (230+240) / 2 = 235 cm and shout out that number to him. He shouts back: "Right - how did you know?"
My calculation should in theory give the same result as the measurement, despite the fact that there is not a 1-to-1 correspondence between the two.
Thus: what is the physical significance of my average length calculation (a+b)/2 ? Does it match in any way what the carpenter actually did?
See above. I look forward you answering your own question here!
How about doing so in the context of my essay? To see where we differ; or what I'm missing?
.
harry wrote:harry wrote:Bell did similarly not stick to the experimental procedure for his derivation of what may be predicted as experimental outcomes. That doesn't mean that Bell didn't make a mistake of course; but he did not mix up the lambda's.
Gordon Watson wrote:But the mistake is that Bell does not MATCH his λs: Please think about the experiments in Paris and Peru. Please consider my (12). Please think about your old married-couples analogy.
No, we were mistaken, as others as well as I explained. Bell certainly matched his lambda's, as can be seen from his math notation. Any criticism on Bell's derivation must start from that fact.
It is not clear (to me) what fact we must start from?
Perhaps, if you told me where you'd like to start, then I could start there and get the same result: Bell's theorem refuted.
I could start where Bell starts: His (1) and (2) and prove (3) to hold?
Or at his next start, his (14a): and prove (15) not to hold?
.
harry wrote:[...]
harry wrote:As a reminder, here's a copy of my elaboration of my interpretation of your version of that part of Bell's derivation; that may come handy for a detailed discussion as it fills up a few blanks in both Bell's and your paper. Most of us had difficulty following your argumentation which is overly compact. [..]
I added in
red the corresponding (or seemingly corresponding) equations in Bell's paper.
Please correct it where I misinterpret your argument, and take it from there!
Watson's section [4] "
Bell's 1964 analysis refuted":
[...]
Expansion based on Bells 1964 paper eq. 13-15, in http://www.drchinese.com/David/Bell_Compact.pdf
and Gordon Watson's recent Vixra paper section 4, in http://vixra.org/pdf/1403.0089v3.pdf[note: that section is similar to the corresponding section in the paper under discussion]
A, B are observation outcomes of Alice and Bob respectively and a, b, c, are three corresponding angles in the two systems of Alice and Bob.
Bells derivation of eq.(13) - (15) in discrete notation:
A(a,λi) = - B(a,λi) [ and thus also: A(b,λi) = - B(b,λi) , A(c,λi) = - B(c,λi) ]
. . . (13) The average of the products of a series of subsequently measured related pairs at angles (a, b) will be:
<A(a) B(b)> = 1/n Σ [A(a,λi) B(b,λi) ] (sum of i = 1 to n; n -> ∞)
From (13) => <A(a) B(b)> = -1/n Σ [A(a,λi) A(b,λi) ]
. . . (14)Observations with angles (a, c) cannot be done at the same time and on the same particles as the observations with angles (a, b).
Often these are measured sequentially and at random. → require indices i, j.
[Note: Watson chose i and n+i, suggesting two subsequent measurement series.]
<A(a) B(b)> − <A(a) B(c)> = - 1/n Σ [A(a,λi) A(b,λi) − A(a, λj) A(c,λj)]
. . . (14a) }
A(a,λi) = +/-1 => A(a,λi) A(a,λi) = 1 and similar A(b,λi) A(b,λi) = 1
. . . . . . . . . . }
=>
<A(a) B(b)> − <A(a) B(c)> = 1/n Σ A(a,λi) A(b,λi) [A(a,λi) A(b,λi) A(a,λj) A(c,λj) − 1]
. . . (14b)This is what [Watson apparently argues that] Bell's (14b) should mean, in discrete form and with added precision.
To this point looks OK. But I question what follows:
harry wrote:
From this follows (see (14)) :
Sorry, but does (14) support your next step?
harry wrote:<A(a) B(b)> − <A(a) B(c)> = <A(a) B(b)> 1/n Σ [1 - A(a,λi) A(b,λi) A(a, λj) A(c,λj)]
Is this correct?
Trying to keep it simple here, to show possible error.
In general: 1/n ΣXk [1-Yk] ≠ 1/n ΣXk [1/n Σ(1-Yk)] .
Isn't that, effectively, what you've done?
No, not exactly. As we are here multiplying averages it is not so simple; and I just tried to guess how Bell went from 14b to 15.
However you make an interesting point! Perhaps Bell was making unwarranted assumptions going from 14b to 15. We should scrutinize every move.

Anyway, you did not critizise that aspect of his derivation in your papers so one should not linger over it in an expansion of your argument.
So we let his slide for the moment?
.
harry wrote:harry wrote:and thus also:
|<A(a) B(b)> − <A(a) B(c)>| = |<A(a) B(b)>| 1/n Σ [1 - A(a,λi) A(b,λi) A(a, λj) A(c,λj)]
And as the multiplication factor |<A(a) B(b)>| <= 1, we also find:
|<A(a) B(b)> − <A(a) B(c)>| <= 1/n Σ [1 - A(a,λi) A(b,λi) A(a,λj) A(c,λj)]
Assuming that his A(a,λ) A(a,λ) = (+1)*(+1) or (-1)*(-1), Bell finds (without the i and j):
|<A(a) B(b)> − <A(a) B(c)>| <= 1/n Σ [1 - A(b,λi) A(c,λj)] . . . (14c)
However, in general A(a,λi) A(a,λj) = +/-1, as i and j refer to unrelated events.
[...]
And next Bell claims, [or so it seems] that the second term on the right in (14c) is <A(b) B(c)>, so that:
1 + <A(b) B(c)> >= |<A(a) B(b)> − <A(a) B(c)>| . . . (15)
However, the second term on the right in (14c) is in general NOT <A(b) B(c)>:
1/n Σ -A(b,λi) A(c,λj) = 1/n Σ A(b,λi) B(c,λj).
That is not about the measurements of related (entangled) pairs but of unrelated events!
In that population sampling procedure, no sample contains a married couple at all.
Thus Bell's equation (15) etc. do not follow, according to Watson.
When it comes to QM and BT, I'm not much into analogies.
However, this one looks to be a beauty!
You've nicely identified exactly what Bell does! (Haven't you?) [..]
Once more: no, the above detailed reconstruction does
not correctly reproduce Bell. We overlooked the fact that of course he held lambda constant when he integrated over lambda (it's an unforgettable sin
not to do so). And because of that he had to include the relative frequency (probability) of each lambda - something that is glaringly missing in the above reconstruction, because that reconstruction ignores what he really tried to do.
How, exactly, does he hold lambda constant when he integrates over it? Don't constants come out of the integral as constants?
What am I missing here, please?
Please explain this, which should not be beyond me but is: (it's an unforgettable sin not to do so).
Soin? Not to do what? Maybe give me an example of the sin in practice, IN THE CONTEXT of my essay?
harry wrote:[..]
…..
Finally, to help you return to your prior very-clear thinking.
Ignoring the many essays in which similar equations are unnumbered in the Bellian literature, please consider this:
A: Bell's 1964:(14a) IS mathematically and experimentally valid.
I hope that it is clear now that Bell's (14) does
not directly relate to experiment; the terms are grouped per the same recurring lambda instead of per observed particle pairs.
Recurring lambda when lambda is taken from a continuum? P = 0.
Recurring lambda from an infinite discrete set? P= 0.
Please explain: How do lambda recur in EPRB? Except by mistakenly thinking of them as being some beable to do with Bertlmann's finite number of socks?
harry wrote: Thus, your question about "experimentally valid" is too ambiguous. Compare once more: my average calculation about the carpenter's experiment gives the correct experimental result but does not match experiment. Do you call that "experimentally invalid"? Depending on your answer, in your wording we then get that Bell's 1964:(14a)
IS /
IS NOT experimentally valid. And the same for all what follows.

Harry, surely: There's a BIG misleading TYPO here!!
Bell's (14a) is FINE! It IS experimentally valid! Surely we ALL agree on that?
!! (14b) is INVALID IN EVERY WAY if you are studying EPRB!
Of course: it is quite OK for Bertlmann's smelly socks. They can be non-destructively washed and re-tested many times!
HTH? What would help me (for sure) is shorter passages upon which to comment. Any number of same; no problem.
PS: I still have no idea as to where my analysis is wrong! Especially as I can "do Bell" with lambda continuous or discrete -- and get the same result.
Glad to have you back; with best regards; Gordon
