SpectraCat said:
Um .. that's quite a leap there. How do you get from lack of CFD to no free will? Lack of free will means everything is determined .. lack of CFD is going in the other direction .. it means there are things that you cannot know, not that everything is determined.
Well, maybe I am pushing the envelope here. I interpret CFD by considering the canonical example - If I measure position, I cannot know the momentum. CFD is stronger - it says that if you suppose that you had in fact measured momentum, then you may arrive at conclusions that are logically inconsistent with the results you obtained when you measured the position. I don't think its a problem in this particular case, its just a way of stating CFD.
It is in fact the case with the Bell inequalities. They rely on results which are based on supposition, not on actual measurements. If you have two spin detectors oriented on the same axis, they will always measure opposite spins for an entangled pair. If you assume CFD, then you assume that if one detector measures a particular string of spin directions, then the other detector, not oriented in the same direction, would have measured the same string of opposite spin directions if it had been oriented in the same direction. You can choose non-locality to explain Bell, but you can also choose lack of CFD.
I'm not a fanatic supporter of this - it just makes me wonder if CFD is another prejudice of our classical brains that might not be justified in the quantum realm and is in fact the resolution of the Bell paradox. I guess it does not imply lack of free will, just that lack of free will would imply lack of CFD. Or does it imply lack of free will? I don't know, it's just a puzzle that bothers me. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterfactual_definiteness
People give me a hard time for harping on the idea that we should not use language which makes implicit classical assumptions when discussing QM, using concepts which are untestable in principle, or statements which do not refer ultimately to measurements. Just about every quantum paradox violates this rule, but not Bell. I'm starting to check every statement I make not only for untestable concepts, but for CFD as well, just to see where it goes.