FrediFizzx wrote:Hi Jay,
I think I found the source of my confusion. Right before and in eq. (14.11) you drop out the J-sigmas so when you get to eq. (14.13, 14.14) it looks like there is only one J source when they are in fact still expressions for interactions between two J sources.
minkwe wrote:So you believe
1. The "guiding potential" definitely exists as a physical thing (in the real world) rather than just an information manipulation device of your theory.
2. It is impossible to explain (as differentiated from "I cannot explain").
Won't you need to believe both of those in order to believe non-locality is required? Otherwise, maybe the "guiding potential" is not real (1 out the door), and/or maybe somebody else can explain it even if you can't (2 out the door), then your belief is irrational/premature.
Brad Johnson wrote:Ilja, isn't this a Hamiltonian function? If so then the space in
consideration is a phase space and not a global object.
So what we have is a wave function associated with a mass
In motion. IOW restraints on degrees of freedom.
Schmelzer wrote:First of all, if one follows Popper, then anyway all scientific research is, in a certain sense, premature: It never gives absolute certainty. Theories may be corroborated by observation, but this does not prove them. Moreover, (less well-known, but also Popper) even an experimental falsification cannot be certain, and remains open to criticism.
For a scientist, this would be an explanation which is compatible with the existing mathematical apparatus. It may contain additional elements (like the dBB guiding equation), but should not contradict the existing apparatus.
The existing mathematical apparatus describes the quantum state with a wave function on the configuration space - but the configuration is, from the very start, a global object.
One can, of course, look for modifications to get rid of this wave function. But this is something one has, yet, to do. I'm very much in favour of interpreting the wave function, at least in part, as epistemical. But this is something one has yet to realize.
Moreover, there is Bell's theorem, which tells us that a local realistic explanation is not possible.
Bell interview in Omni magazine wrote:Bell:Then in 1932 [mathematician] John von Neumann gave a “rigorous” mathematical proof stating that you couldn’t find a nonstatistical theory that would give the same predictions as quantum
mechanics. That von Neumann proof in itself is one that must someday be the subject of a Ph.D. thesis for a history student. Its reception was quite remarkable. The literature is full of respectable
references to “the brilliant proof of von Neumann;” but I do not believe it could have been read at that time by more than two or three people.
Omni: Why is that?
Bell: The physicists didn’t want to be bothered with the idea that maybe quantum theory is only provisional. A horn of plenty had been spilled before them, and every physicist could find something to apply quantum mechanics to. They were pleased to think that this great mathematician had shown it was so. Yet the Von Neumann proof, if you actually come to grips with it, falls apart in your hands! There is nothing to it. It’s not just flawed, it’s silly. If you look at the assumptions it made, it does not hold up for a moment. It’s the work of a mathematician, and he makes assumptions that have a mathematical symmetry to them. When you translate them into terms of physical disposition, they’re nonsense. You may quote me on that: the proof of von Neumann is not merely false but foolish.
Therefore there seems not much hope for others finding local realistic explanations.
minkwe wrote:The is no polite response that is fitting, so I'll leave this one as is.
Schmelzer wrote:I think similarly about your response.
minkwe wrote:Schmelzer wrote:I think similarly about your response.
No problem. But I will repeat my point
Yet the Bell proof, if you actually come to grips with it, falls apart in your hands! There is nothing to it. It’s not just flawed, it’s silly. If you look at the assumptions it made, it does not hold up for a moment. It’s the work of a mathematician, and he makes assumptions that have a mathematical symmetry to them. When you translate them into terms of physical disposition, they’re nonsense. You may quote me on that: the proof of Bell is not merely false but foolish.
That many well-meaning physicists and mathematicians have fallen for it, will be a subject for the history books.
Schmelzer wrote:If the "spooky action at a distance" is nonsense or not is shown in experiments. If somebody makes the point that all experiments done up to now have loopholes - no problem, I'm not an experimenter to evaluate such claims. AFAIU, it seems that a loophole-free experiment is something which can be reached, thus, we will see.
If the quantum prediction wins, I have a loophole-free observational evidence against fundamental relativism. If not, that means quantum theory will be falsified - I would say this is even more interesting.
FrediFizzx wrote:The point that both of you are missing is that Joy's model predicts a successful loophole-free experiment.
Anyways, I expect that your ether theory is not a complete theory of Nature either since you have non-local action in it. Seems quite contradictory to me.
Schmelzer wrote:First, we are not missing some point in Joy's model but our point is that it is wrong.
FrediFizzx wrote:Schmelzer wrote:First, we are not missing some point in Joy's model but our point is that it is wrong.
LOL! It gives the same prediction for EPRB as quantum theory, -a.b. In a classical local realistic way.
FrediFizzx wrote:Well, we are sorry that you don't understand how Nature works.
Schmelzer wrote:Pure mathematics, no Nature involved.
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