Frame Dragger said:
Awww, I just knew there was a catch. I'd say the thread has improved
There's always a catch.

I'm betting that there's one regarding the standard interpretation of Bell's theorem.
Frame Dragger said:
... I've made my views clear in this thread ...
You haven't commented on any specific aspect of the formal incompatibility between Bell's ansatz and Bell tests. I gather that you think that nonlocality can be inferred from Bell test results. This requires that something in Bell's generalized LHV formulation represents locality. What exactly do you think that is?
Frame Dragger said:
... I'd say the thread has improved ...
At least they're not talking about superdeterminism and free will any more.
I've learned some things from the thread, and, as always, these discussions get me thinking about this stuff again -- and, yes, I'm still confused.
The OP's (akhmeteli) main points are not supported.
Bell test results do not imply nonlocality.
Bell's general LR formulation doesn't represent locality.
LR is not definitively ruled out (but it doesn't look promising for the LRists).
Ruling out LR doesn't entail that Nature is nonlocal.
A more reasonable viewpoint is that our lack of a detailed qualitative understanding of quantum level reality (and other technical problems which prohibit the accurate prediction of individual results) is what prohibits a viable LR description.
Dmitry67 said:
Is it possible to say that LR is ruled out experimentally and ignore all arguments about internal problems in QM?
Yes. The ruling out, or not, of LR has nothing to do with QM. It has to do with the problem of formalizing locality. Bell expresses locality as the factorability of the joint probability. Do you see a problem with that? If not, you should.
Dmitry67 said:
Hm
Imagine that QM is not discovered yet (but SR is discovered)
However, there are many EPR Alice/Bob experiments and tons of data
I was thinking that in that case it would be possible to rule out local theories, even without QM, just based on the experiments. AM I wrong?
No. Let's go further and say that you've got tons of data from biphoton Bell-type experiments, and there's no Bell's theorem, no QM, and no consideration of nonlocality.
You're producing pairs of counter-propagating optical disturbances via atomic cascades, with each pair randomly polarized (and members of each pair identically polarized via emission by the same atom), and you're analyzing each pair with 2 crossed polarizers.
From classical optics, which is all you've got to refer to, What sort of correlation would you expect to see between rate of joint detection, P(A,B), and the angular difference (|a-b|, or θ) between the polarizer's transmission axes?
You would expect to see P(A,B) = cos
2θ . Why? Because when you put two polarizers between a source of randomly polarized light and a detector, then the measured intensity (the rate of coincidental detection) varies as cos
2θ.
Intuitively, from the above, this seems like a local common cause scenario, right? Now formalize it.
If you can't construct a viable and explicitly local model for joint detection, then does that mean that joint detection is determined nonlocally? No.
But suppose that you are able to construct a viable and explicitly nonlocal model, then does that mean that joint detection is determined nonlocally? No.