Uncovering the Conceptual Catch in EPR Proposal for Non-Commutative Variables

In summary, the EPR proposal suggests that both non-commutative variables can be measured with absolute accuracy at one location simultaneously. However, this raises concerns about the completeness of quantum mechanics and the idea of separability. The claim is made that there is still uncertainty in the other non-commutative variable, as it has not yet been measured. Therefore, the prediction of one variable does not guarantee knowledge of both variables before the measurement takes place. This raises questions about the elements of reality possessed by Bob's particle regarding both variables. The reasoning behind this proposal was later proved false by Bell's inequality.
  • #1
Adel Makram
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I question whether there would be a conceptual catch in EPR proposal to get both non commutative variables define with accuracy at one location simultaneously. The idea of separability that EPR introduced to questioning the completeness of QM is that whenever one measures a physical variable q at Alice location, one can predict with absolute accuracy the-q of Bob particle without disturbing it.
My claim is that there is still uncertainty in p variable (the other non-commutative variable) of Bob`s particle simply because it is not yet measured. So the prediction of one of non-commutative variable does not mean that both variables are known before the measurement taken place on the other variable. And consequently, this does not grantee that Bob particle possesses elements of reality regarding p and q.
 
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  • #2
Adel Makram said:
I question whether there would be a conceptual catch in EPR proposal to get both non commutative variables define with accuracy at one location simultaneously. The idea of separability that EPR introduced to questioning the completeness of QM is that whenever one measures a physical variable q at Alice location, one can predict with absolute accuracy the-q of Bob particle without disturbing it.
My claim is that there is still uncertainty in p variable (the other non-commutative variable) of Bob`s particle simply because it is not yet measured. So the prediction of one of non-commutative variable does not mean that both variables are known before the measurement taken place on the other variable. And consequently, this does not grantee that Bob particle possesses elements of reality regarding p and q.

Mostly I would agree. There is no question that EPR thought that p and q could be simultaneously measured without uncertainty. They felt that any other perspective meant that the reality of Bob was dependent on the nature of an observation by Alice (who is presumably spacelike separated). And that would be the counter view you are asserting - that we live in an observer dependent reality.

Of course, your view is consistent with Bell. EPR did not have the benefit of his analysis of the situation. :smile:
 
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  • #3
Adel Makram said:
there is still uncertainty [...] simply because it is not yet measured

We have definitions for what we mean by uncertainty, and they don't distinguish between "I know what the next measurement will be because I already measured it just now" and "I know what the next measurement will be because of [complicated reasons]".

As an analogy, suppose I flip a normal everyday coin then cover it with my hand. You don't know if the coin landed heads up or tails up. You're maximally uncertain about the outcome. But then I lift the coin and show you the bottom, which happens to be heads. Are you still maximally uncertain? After all, you still haven't seen the top of the coin.

Of course not! You immediately infer that the coin landed tails up. The bottom of the coin and the top of the coin are related; there is mutual information present. Given one side, you can infer the other. And the quantum case with EPR pairs is no different in this respect: there's mutual information, you see one side, and then you infer the other side. (What is different and interesting is that the mutual information is somehow stronger. You get the same correspondence along multiple non-commuting axes.)
 
  • #4
Adel Makram said:
I question whether there would be a conceptual catch in EPR proposal to get both non commutative variables define with accuracy at one location simultaneously. The idea of separability that EPR introduced to questioning the completeness of QM is that whenever one measures a physical variable q at Alice location, one can predict with absolute accuracy the-q of Bob particle without disturbing it.
My claim is that there is still uncertainty in p variable (the other non-commutative variable) of Bob`s particle simply because it is not yet measured. So the prediction of one of non-commutative variable does not mean that both variables are known before the measurement taken place on the other variable. And consequently, this does not grantee that Bob particle possesses elements of reality regarding p and q.

I don't remember who was the genius who thought of changing the noncommuting variables from [itex](p, q)[/itex] to different spin components, but the latter is a big improvement, in my opinion. But in any case, if you have two noncommuting variables [itex]A[/itex] and [itex]B[/itex], and you have perfect correlation (or anti-correlation) between two different particles, then:
  1. If Alice measures [itex]A[/itex] for her particle, she knows with certainty what value Bob will get for a measurement of [itex]A[/itex].
  2. If Alice measures [itex]B[/itex] for her particle, she knows with certainty what value Bob will get for a measurement of [itex]B[/itex].
In case 1, assuming no non-local interaction, it seems that [itex]A[/itex] for Bob's particle had a definite value. But the value for [itex]B[/itex] can be uncertain. In case 2, the value for [itex]A[/itex] can be uncertain.

But EPR reasoned that if Alice's choice to measure [itex]A[/itex] or [itex]B[/itex] is freely chosen (not predetermined), and if that choice has no influence on Bob or his particle, then Bob's particle can't go from some state with an uncertain value of [itex]A[/itex] to a state with a definite value of [itex]A[/itex], because that would be a change in the state of Bob's particle. So they reasoned that [itex]A[/itex] must have already been definite before Alice made her choice. Similarly, [itex]B[/itex] must have been definite. So they were led to the conclusion that both variables must have had definite values all along.

I think it was impeccable reasoning, but was never-the-less proved false by Bell's inequality. How flawless reasoning can be empirically refuted is one of those big mysteries of the universe. :wink:
 
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  • #5
stevendaryl said:
I don't remember who was the genius who thought of changing the noncommuting variables from (p,q)(p, q) to different spin components
Bohm, I believe.
but the latter is a big improvement, in my opinion.
Just about everyone's opinion, I expect.
 
  • #6
stevendaryl said:
But EPR reasoned that if Alice's choice to measure [itex]A[/itex] or [itex]B[/itex] is freely chosen (not predetermined), and if that choice has no influence on Bob or his particle, then Bob's particle can't go from some state with an uncertain value of [itex]A[/itex] to a state with a definite value of [itex]A[/itex], because that would be a change in the state of Bob's particle. So they reasoned that [itex]A[/itex] must have already been definite before Alice made her choice. Similarly, [itex]B[/itex] must have been definite. So they were led to the conclusion that both variables must have had definite values all along.
But concluding that the particle must have a physical reality without being measured based on a premise that the physical reality of Alice particle comes to a definite physical value after being measured is inconsistent argument. You don`t see self reference here! One can`t prove a conclusion based on a preposition which is itself a rephrasing of that conclusion because this would be an inconsistent logical thought. (by rephrasing here, I meant that the system collapses into a particular state which in general implies that the physical quantity has no physical reality at all before the measurement and of course is the case if no measurement at all has been taken place).
For example, if A implies B and B implies C is a theory, then if C comes to contradict the physically reality, then one should argue that A is a wrong start. But if we start with C implies B and B implies C which is not physical real then why we consider it as axiom or premise in that theory in the first place?
 
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  • #7
Adel Makram said:
But concluding that the particle must have a physical reality without being measured based on a premise that the physical reality of Alice particle comes to a definite physical value after being measured is inconsistent argument

No, it's not. Let's assume that, according to some frame [itex]F[/itex], Alice measures variable [itex]A[/itex] slightly before Bob measures the same variable. So for a brief period of time, Alice knows what Bob's result will be. So during that period, Bob's particle is in a state of having a definite value of [itex]A[/itex], even though he hasn't measured it. Either it was always in that state, or it made the transition to that state when Alice made her measurement.

The other way out is to say that the state of Bob's particle, as deduced by Alice, is not objective, but is a subjective state, relative to Alice's information. That's sort of the Many-Worlds approach.
 
  • #8
Adel Makram said:
But concluding that the particle must have a physical reality without being measured based on a premise that the physical reality of Alice particle comes to a definite physical value after being measured is inconsistent argument. You don`t see self reference here! One can`t prove a conclusion based on a preposition which is itself a rephrasing of that conclusion because this would be an inconsistent logical thought. (by rephrasing here, I meant that the system collapses into a particular state which in general implies that the physical quantity has no physical reality at all before the measurement and of course is the case if no measurement at all has been taken place).
For example, if A implies B and B implies C is a theory, then if C comes to contradict the physically reality, then one should argue that A is a wrong start. But if we start with C implies B and B implies C which is not physical real then why we consider it as axiom or premise in that theory in the first place?

I realize that I can't even parse what you're saying.
 
  • #9
stevendaryl said:
So for a brief period of time, Alice knows what Bob's result will be.
Because she knows what her result comes up with, right? So EPR admits that Alice`s particle has no physical reality before the measurement, right? but this is the same conclusion they disproved in their paper, So my question how one uses a conclusion to prove or disprove itself?
 
  • #10
Adel Makram said:
So EPR admits that Alice`s particle has no physical reality before the measurement, right?

They don't say that, no. They simply say that Alice can learn about Bob with 100% certainty without disturbing Bob. Once they draw that conclusion, they conclude that there is physical reality independent of the actual measurement. That conclusion is based on a couple of assumptions, one of which Bell showed to be unsupported.
 
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  • #11
Adel Makram said:
Because she knows what her result comes up with, right? So EPR admits that Alice`s particle has no physical reality before the measurement, right? but this is the same conclusion they disproved in their paper, So my question how one uses a conclusion to prove or disprove itself?

That's the way a proof by contradiction works: You start off making certain assumptions (in this case, locality plus observables have no definite values until they are measured) and you derive a contradiction. That means that one of your assumptions was wrong. EPR assumed that the wrong assumption was that observables lack definite values until they are measured. (Bohm instead assumed that the wrong assumption was locality.)
 
  • #12
stevendaryl said:
That's the way a proof by contradiction works: You start off making certain assumptions (in this case, locality plus observables have no definite values until they are measured) and you derive a contradiction. That means that one of your assumptions was wrong. EPR assumed that the wrong assumption was that observables lack definite values until they are measured. (Bohm instead assumed that the wrong assumption was locality.)
So, how can we use a wrong assumption to prove a true statement? How do we use "observables have no definite values until they are measured" to arrive to "observables have definite values without measurement as per EPR definition of the complete physical theory". I am not sure if this a real proof of contradiction, may be I need to learn more about the subject. The true meaning of proof of contradiction is as follow; having A in hand, prove that A implies B. To do this, assume -B (negation of B) that leads to -A by logical induction, however, this contradicts the fact that we already have A which means -B can not be true and hence A implies B.
 
  • #13
Adel Makram said:
How do we use "observables have no definite values until they are measured" to arrive to "observables have definite values without measurement as per EPR definition of the complete physical theory".

EPR showed you could predict a definite value of any of Bob's observables in advance. The logical deduction was that Bob's observables existed independent of and prior to measurement. It did require the assumption, eminently reasonable, that measuring Alice does not in any way alter Bob.

QM implies that Bob's non-commuting observables do NOT have simultaneously definite values (essentially your "observables have no definite values until they are measured"). So that was the basis of the contradiction.

(Of course the "eminently reasonable" assumption was subject to attack - and it was attacked.)
 
  • #14
DrChinese said:
EPR showed you could predict a definite value of any of Bob's observables in advance. The logical deduction was that Bob's observables existed independent of and prior to measurement. It did require the assumption, eminently reasonable, that measuring Alice does not in any way alter Bob.

QM implies that Bob's non-commuting observables do NOT have simultaneously definite values (essentially your "observables have no definite values until they are measured"). So that was the basis of the contradiction.

(Of course the "eminently reasonable" assumption was subject to attack - and it was attacked.)
For the first part which regards the prediction of Bob's observables, I still do not see a valid logical deduction behind it because one can not invalidate some statement, which is "Bob's particle has no definite position without measurement", based on a premise of QM that validates it. This is not a proof by contradiction. Plus from physical point of view, QM would simply say that although Bob's particle is not measured, yet it is entangled with Alice's one and it has no separate state vector from the defintion of entangled state.
For the second part, Einstein didn't argue about the uncertainity principle, since 1927 as he simply moved from trying to prove that QM is inconsistent to that it is incomplete.
 
  • #15
Adel Makram said:
The true meaning of proof of contradiction is as follow; having A in hand, prove that A implies B. To do this, assume -B (negation of B) that leads to -A by logical induction, however, this contradicts the fact that we already have A which means -B can not be true and hence A implies B.

Proof by contradiction is not quite that strong. If we can prove that A and -B implies both C and -C, that is sufficient to show that A implies B. However, that is not sufficient to exclude the possibility that -A and -B are both true.

In the EPR argument, proposition A is the laws of QM, -B is "unmeasured properties have definite values" and C is "we can determine the simultaneous values of two non-commuting observables". A and -B implies C, but also A implies -C so we have our contradiction: Either A is false and -B is true, or A is true and -B is false, or both of them are false.

If you start with the EPR premise that -B is true you'll conclude that A is false. Bohr and company preferred the other position, that A must be correct and therefore B, no matter how distasteful, was also correct. Bell's contribution was to provide an experimental method for distinguishing the two possibilities.
 
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  • #16
Nugatory said:
Proof by contradiction is not quite that strong. If we can prove that A and -B implies both C and -C, that is sufficient to show that A implies B. However, that is not sufficient to exclude the possibility that -A and -B are both true.

In the EPR argument, proposition A is the laws of QM, -B is "unmeasured properties have definite values" and C is "we can determine the simultaneous values of two non-commuting observables". A and -B implies C, but also A implies -C so we have our contradiction: Either A is false and -B is true, or A is true and -B is false, or both of them are false.
I admire your comment but there are two points:
1) The logical contradiction of a form (if A implies B and if A implies –B) works only when the hypothesis, A is true. Because if A is false then there would be no contradiction. In English, if QM is true and it leads to two opposite statements, then there is a contradiction, may because of something wrong in the logical induction not in the premise that QM is false.
2) A implies B itself is not justified by the way EPR did. The reason again is related to logical invalidity to prove or disprove some statement using the statement itself.
 
  • #17
Adel Makram said:
I admire your comment but there are two points:
1) The logical contradiction of a form (if A implies B and if A implies –B) works only when the hypothesis, A is true. Because if A is false then there would be no contradiction.
Right, so if we find that A implies B and A implies -B we can conclude that A is false.
In English, if QM is true and it leads to two opposite statements, then there is a contradiction, may because of something wrong in the logical induction not in the premise that QM is false.
You may still be missing the point of the EPR argument. QM (proposition A) does not lead to two opposite statements, C and -C, it leads only to C. However, QM and the additional assumption (proposition -B) that unmeasured quantities have a definite value does imply both C and -C. Thus, (A and -B) has to be false, which implies (-A or B).
2) A implies B itself is not justified by the way EPR did. The reason again is related to logical invalidity to prove or disprove some statement using the statement itself.
I don't understand this at all. A and -B are separate assumptions; the proposition whose truth was assumed to start the proof by contradiction was neither of these, but rather (A and -B). Once we've found that (A and -B) leads to a contradiction, we know that (A and -B) has to be false, and the question is whether it's A that is false, -B that is false, or both of them.
 
  • #18
Nugatory said:
Right, so if we find that A implies B and A implies -B we can conclude that A is false.
I don't think so. This is just a contradiction not a proof by contradiction. We can not prove that A is false here. Suppose A is "it rains" and B is "it will turn green", then saying: if it rains, it will turn green and if it rains it will not turn green, does not prove that it is not raining, simply because may be it is raining on the sea for the second case. The proof by contradiction would be similar to: prove that because it is green, then it must have been raining. To do this, we assume it is not raining, then because of this it will never turn green, assuming the complete association between them, but this contradicts the fact that we have green already then we must conclude that it must have been raining.
 
  • #19
Nugatory said:
You may still be missing the point of the EPR argument. QM (proposition A) does not lead to two opposite statements, C and -C, it leads only to C. However, QM and the additional assumption (proposition -B) that unmeasured quantities have a definite value does imply both C and -C. Thus, (A and -B) has to be false, which implies (-A or B).
I do not understand why you mentioned that (A and -B) implies C?. I agree that only A implies C and (A and -B) imply -C.
I then applied truth table for rigorous analysis, (I used ">" to mean: implies and "^" to mean "and".
When A implies C and (A and -B) implies -C, then this does not mean that A is false.
Hereby I attach my analysis using a truth table which does not lead to a tautology in the last column because of the false result in the first row. So EPR should not prove that QM is inconsistent.
 

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  • #20
Adel Makram said:
I do not understand why you mentioned that (A and -B) implies C?. I agree that only A implies C and (A and -B) imply -C.
I'm using the rule that if X implies Y, then (X and Q) implies Y for all Q. (If you're not sure where this came from, or if you are confused because you've seen what appears to be a counterexample, start a new thread in one of the math forums).
When A implies C and (A and -B) implies -C, then this does not mean that A is false.
Of course it doesn't, and I never said that it did. What I did say is that from the two propositions "A implies C" and "A and -B imply -C" we can conclude that (A and -B) is false. That being false is equivalent to (-A or B) being true: one or both of A and -B must be false.
So EPR should not prove that QM is inconsistent.
Of course not. That's not the claim being made.
What EPR does show is that the proposition "QM is consistent and quantities not measured have definite values" is inconsistent. Use A to represent "QM is consistent" and B to represent "quantities not measured do not have definite values" and this proposition can be written as (A and -B). That's the proposition that leads to a contradiction so is known to be false. What we didn't know, until Bell provided an experimental method of testing the two possibilities, was whether (A and -B) was false because A was false or -B was false.
 
  • #21
Nugatory said:
I'm using the rule that if X implies Y, then (X and Q) implies Y for all Q. (If you're not sure where this came from, or if you are confused because you've seen what appears to be a counterexample, start a new thread in one of the math forums).
Why math forums :) if I am questioning logical validity of statements that have physical meaning. I rather prefer to start another thread here in this forum asking the following: did EPR show in their paper that: the Rules of Quantum Mechanics and the definition of the physical reality that quantities have definite values even if they are not measured can lead to impossibility of simultaneous determination of values of two non-commuting observables. If you agree about this text, I will post it now.
 
  • #22
It seems to me that people are mixing up EPR's original argument with Bell's result. EPR argued that if the result of a measurement can be predicted ahead of time with absolute certainty, then there is an "element of reality" corresponding to that result.

Here's an analogy: You flip a coin, and you get either "heads" or "tails". There is no reason to assume that the result was a predetermined fact about the coin. It could be that the result is due to some complicated interaction between the coin and the flipping mechanism, so that no amount of facts about the coin alone--its composition, its shape, etc.--would allow you to predict the result with certainty. But if there was a way to predict the result with certainty before the coin is flipped (even before it is decided who is going to flip the coin, or what flipping technique will be used), then people would normally assume that the result is somehow encoded in the state of the coin, in some way. Another possibility, which is far-fetched, but will be included for completeness, is that there is some nonlocal influence on the coin, so that whoever or whatever made the prediction has the power to force the coin to land heads-up or tails-up.

So, when talking about coin flips, it would seem to be that there are three possibilities:
  1. The result is undefined up until the moment the coin is flipped (analogous to the Copenhagen interpretation that particles do not have properties until they are measured).
  2. The result is due to nonlocal influences.
  3. The result is somehow determined by an unknown feature of the coin (a hidden variable).
Perfect predictions rule out possibility 1. The prohibition of faster-than-light influences rules out possibility 2. So that leaves hidden-variables, possibility 3.

EPR assumed that the same sort of reasoning applied to measurements of properties of correlated particles. If there is the possibility of perfect predictions, and there are no faster-than-light influences, then there must be hidden variables governing the outcomes.

Bell then showed that hidden variables (of the type EPR imagined) were ALSO ruled out. So that either leaves FTL influences (which is the conclusion made by advocates of the Bohm theory), or that somehow QM introduces a new type of correlation that cannot be understood as: Either results are nondeterministic, or they are determined. QM results are neither nondeterministic nor determined, somehow.
 
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  • #23
Adel Makram said:
Why math forums :)
Because logic is a branch of mathematics. If you're not going to base your argument on things like "I do not understand why you mentioned that (A and -B) implies C?. I agree that only A implies C and (A and -B) imply -C" we don't need to go there.
Did EPR show in their paper that: the Rules of Quantum Mechanics and the definition of the physical reality that quantities have definite values even if they are not measured can lead to impossibility of simultaneous determination of values of two non-commuting observables.
No, they showed the exact opposite. They showed that under the Rules of Quantum Mechanics and their definition of physical reality leads to the possibility of simultaneous determination of two non-commuting variables.
f you agree about this text, I will post it now.
You already have.
 
  • #24
Nugatory said:
No, they showed the exact opposite. They showed that under the Rules of Quantum Mechanics and their definition of physical reality leads to the possibility of simultaneous determination of two non-commuting variables.
You confused me so much. You said that (A and -B) imply C and (A and -B) imply -C right? First let us agree about C. according to your post #15, you said:
Nugatory said:
C is "we can determine the simultaneous values of two non-commuting observables".
I know that EPR showd that (A and -B) imply C. now I need to know how did they show (A and -B) imply -C which translates to the statement I just mentioned in the previous post.
 
  • #25
Adel Makram said:
now I need to know how did they show (A and -B) imply -C
You'll find their argument in section two of the EPR paper, which is at http://www.drchinese.com/David/EPR.pdf/ . Be sure also to read the second paragraph from the end, where the authors make clear that their conclusion depends on the -B assumption.

David Bohm later restated this argument in a form that is easier to follow. Consider a pair of spin-entangled particles in the singlet state. Among the many observables on this system are the spins of particles A and B in the horizontal and vertical directions. The horizontal and vertical spins of particle A do not commute. However, I can pass particle A through a vertically oriented Stern-Gerlach device and pass particle B through a horizontally oriented one. The measurement on A gives me A's spin in the vertical direction, and the measurement on B gives me (because of the entanglement) A's unmeasured horizontal spin - but only if we assume that that unmeasured quantity is an element of reality in the EPR sense. Without that assumption, I'm left with the weaker statement that we know what A's horizontal spin would have been if we had measured it but we didn't so it is still undefined.
 
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  • #26
stevendaryl said:
Perfect predictions rule out possibility 1
I understood that EPR ruled out the possibility of having the Rules of Quantum Mechanics consistent with the Criterion of Reality (COR) as they defined, because if it is consistent, a contradictory will ensue, therefore they concluded that quantum mechanics can not be complete. So long as this combination leads to a contradiction, then the hypothesis of consistency between the quantum mechanics and COR must be false and then it should not be used to deduce anything from it.
However, trying to find ways to explain the result that perfect prediction of one particle state after measuring its entangled particle indicates that they, EPR, indirectly admitted that both perfect prediction and measurement, with resultant collapse of the wavefunction to a definite state, can be possible altogether. But they already ruled out that possibility in their paper. So on what logical base did they postulate the existence of hidden variables to explain something which is logical invalid?
 
  • #27
stevendaryl said:
It seems to me that people are mixing up EPR's original argument with Bell's result. EPR argued that if the result of a measurement can be predicted ahead of time with absolute certainty, then there is an "element of reality" corresponding to that result.

Here's an analogy: You flip a coin, and you get either "heads" or "tails". There is no reason to assume that the result was a predetermined fact about the coin. It could be that the result is due to some complicated interaction between the coin and the flipping mechanism, so that no amount of facts about the coin alone--its composition, its shape, etc.--would allow you to predict the result with certainty. But if there was a way to predict the result with certainty before the coin is flipped (even before it is decided who is going to flip the coin, or what flipping technique will be used), then people would normally assume that the result is somehow encoded in the state of the coin, in some way. Another possibility, which is far-fetched, but will be included for completeness, is that there is some nonlocal influence on the coin, so that whoever or whatever made the prediction has the power to force the coin to land heads-up or tails-up.

So, when talking about coin flips, it would seem to be that there are three possibilities:
  1. The result is undefined up until the moment the coin is flipped (analogous to the Copenhagen interpretation that particles do not have properties until they are measured).
  2. The result is due to nonlocal influences.
  3. The result is somehow determined by an unknown feature of the coin (a hidden variable).
Perfect predictions rule out possibility 1. The prohibition of faster-than-light influences rules out possibility 2. So that leaves hidden-variables, possibility 3.

EPR assumed that the same sort of reasoning applied to measurements of properties of correlated particles. If there is the possibility of perfect predictions, and there are no faster-than-light influences, then there must be hidden variables governing the outcomes.

Bell then showed that hidden variables (of the type EPR imagined) were ALSO ruled out. So that either leaves FTL influences (which is the conclusion made by advocates of the Bohm theory), or that somehow QM introduces a new type of correlation that cannot be understood as: Either results are nondeterministic, or they are determined. QM results are neither nondeterministic nor determined, somehow.

You can view this conundrum as resulting from our dynamical bias. Here is an adynamical explanation https://www.physicsforums.com/insig...elayed-choice-no-counterfactual-definiteness/
 
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  • #28
In order to appreciate the properties of quantum pair entanglement one must first understand how conjugate pairs come into being. There are a number of processes at the quantum level that produce entangled pairs. These include entangled photons with complementary polarization and electron pairs with up and down spin. One way to think about this is to consider the phenomena in terms of the "right shoe left shoe" model. Assume that a pair of entangled electrons are produced in a laboratory. Prior to measurement the state of both electrons exists only as an equal probability that the spin will be either up or down. When you measure the spin of one of the electrons the probability immediately collapses to one of two values. As a result, you immediately know the spin of its counterpart regardless of its distance from the observer. This has nothing to do with communication between the particles or issues of locality or non locality, it is simply the result of understanding the properties of conjugate pairs. This may appear to be a violation of uncertainty but it is simply a consequence of the properties of pair entanglement.
 
  • #29
ProfChuck said:
One way to think about this is to consider the phenomena in terms of the "right shoe left shoe" model. Assume that a pair of entangled electrons are produced in a laboratory. Prior to measurement the state of both electrons exists only as an equal probability that the spin will be either up or down. When you measure the spin of one of the electrons the probability immediately collapses to one of two values. As a result, you immediately know the spin of its counterpart regardless of its distance from the observer. This has nothing to do with communication between the particles or issues of locality or non locality, it is simply the result of understanding the properties of conjugate pairs.

There is a significant difference between pairs of shoes and and pairs of entangled particles. This example does not do justice to the reader who is not familiar with entangled particle pairs. As far as anyone knows, entangled particles do not possesses either up or down orientations prior to measurement. (In your example: "right shoe left shoe".) Keep in mind that up and down are relative and the orientation is set when the observation occurs - and not before.

As to locality/non-locality and communication: This is interpretation dependent. No one knows if there is some kind of communication or effect between the components of an entangled system.
 
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  • #30
The right shoe left shoe analogy was contributed by Einstein as part of his criticism of "spooky action at a distance". From the perspective of the uncertainty principal conjugate entangled pairs have unknown properties until measured. Once you measure one the probability distribution of both collapses but only from the perspective of the observer performing the measurement. In the event that entangled particles are tested by two observers, more or less simultaneously, each observer will be able to accurately determine the state of the remote particle by observing his or her own particle. However, until the observation is made the state does indeed remain unknown.
 
  • #31
ProfChuck said:
The right shoe left shoe analogy was contributed by Einstein as part of his criticism of "spooky action at a distance".

That example was reasonable, prior to Bell (1965). Einstein did not live to see his wonderful paper.

But it is no longer a good example, and is misleading. Bell himself wrote about some mismatched socks later on:

https://cds.cern.ch/record/142461/files/198009299.pdf
 
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Likes DrClaude
  • #32
Thank you for the link. That is an excellent paper. I knew Feynman while at grad school and remember something he said, "If you think you understand quantum physics it is certain that you don't because nobody does". The issue of hidden variables brings to mind Hawking's observation, "God not only throws dice he throws then into a dark corner where you can never see them." QED is the most accurate theory in scientific history and nobody knows why. That is truly spooky. :wideeyed: It is very difficult to abandon the classical view of reality but quantum physics reveals that it is only an illusion.
 
  • #33
ProfChuck said:
"If you think you understand quantum physics it is certain that you don't because nobody does".

Yes he did say that, and in the intended context is 100% true. The context however is in terms of classical pictures. Plenty of people, including Feynman when he was was alive, understand it only too well.

We now know a LOT more about the foundations of QM. Its simply the most reasonable probability model that allows continuous transformations between pure states and entanglement:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0101012.pdf
https://arxiv.org/abs/0911.0695

ProfChuck said:
It is very difficult to abandon the classical view of reality but quantum physics reveals that it is only an illusion.

:smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile:

That is true without any caveat due to context etc etc. It is the essence of the real issue with QM. It's this. QM is a theory about observations that appear in an assumed common sense classical world. How does a theory that assumes such in the first place explain it? A lot of progress has been made doing that, but a few issues still remain:
http://www.fisica.ufmg.br/~dsoares/cosmos/10/weinberg-einsteinsmistakes.pdf

THE textbook giving the modern detail is by Schlosshauer
https://www.amazon.com/dp/3540357734/?tag=pfamazon01-20

Thanks
Bill
 
Last edited:
  • #34
Adel Makram said:
I understood that EPR ruled out the possibility of having the Rules of Quantum Mechanics consistent with the Criterion of Reality (COR) as they defined, because if it is consistent, a contradictory will ensue, therefore they concluded that quantum mechanics can not be complete. So long as this combination leads to a contradiction, then the hypothesis of consistency between the quantum mechanics and COR must be false and then it should not be used to deduce anything from it.
However, trying to find ways to explain the result that perfect prediction of one particle state after measuring its entan gled particle indicates that they, EPR, indirectly admitted that both perfect prediction and measurement, with resultant collapse of the wavefunction to a definite state, can be possible altogether. But they already ruled out that possibility in their paper. So on what logical base did they postulate the existence of hidden variables to explain something which is logical invalid?

I'm thinking that Einstein, et al, thought of it in terms of the right shoe, left shoe analogy. They thought that the values for measurements were predetermined, and that QM only gives statistical predictions. They didn't know that hidden variables were inconsistent with QM
 
  • #35
stevendaryl said:
I think it was impeccable reasoning, but was never-the-less proved false by Bell's inequality. How flawless reasoning can be empirically refuted is one of those big mysteries of the universe. :wink:
Now I come to understand this statement in the following way.
1) EPR showed that the Rules of Quantum Mechanics and the criterion of reality can not be both true which implies that quantum mechanics is not complete theory.
2) Bell`s type experiments confirmed that the Rules of Quantum Mechanics and the criterion of reality is physically real (because Alice`s particle is collapsed to a particular eigen state which means the quantum mechanics is correct and the Bob`s particle turns instantaneously into the opposite eigen state which means that Bob`s particle state is an element of reality that can be predicted with absolute certainty by Alice once she measures her particle).
As long as the physical reality represented by (2) does not match the logic represented by (1), we can then say that the physical reality is not logically sound. Or "we live in a real but false world".
But also, there is another point, if Bell`s type experiments showed that the quantum mechanics rules and the criterion of reality are both true, then there must be a simultaneous reality of two non-commuting variables which is again against the rules of the quantum mechanics.
Also I am not sure whether any kind of experiments have been performed to show this!
 

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