mitchell porter said:
OK, I think I now recognize your position. You're saying that, instead of or in addition to local hidden variables responsible for individual detection outcomes, there might be another class of local hidden variables responsible for correlations between multiple detection outcomes.
Not exactly. The idea is that the hidden parameter responsible for joint detection rate is a global parameter which isn't varying from pair to pair. It's just that LRHV models are required to explicitly describe the joint detection rate as being determined by the same hidden variables that determine the individual detection rate. I don't see how that's possible if the global hidden parameter that's determining joint detection isn't varying from entangled pair to entangled pair -- and apparently it isn't, because changing the global measurement parameter predictably changes the variable joint detection rate.
We can assume that this unchanging global hidden parameter is the relationship between the entangled property of the entangled entities, and that random variations in the value of the entangled property determine the nonvarying individual detection rate.
The hidden variable (the entangled property) that determines individual detection rate at each end can be assumed, without contradicting either standard qm or experimental results, to have a local cause. And it follows that if the entangled property has a local cause, then the relationship between the spatially separated entities carrying the entangled property has a local cause.
This has supposedly been ruled out. However, this is based on the unreasonable requirement that LRHV models of entanglement be fashioned explicitly in terms of the hidden variable which determines individual detection.
Considering that, then what we're left with is the ruling out of any model of entanglement based on that LRHV requirement.
And whether there are ftl transmissions or action at a distance in nature, or nature is evolving exclusively in accordance with the principle of local causality with transmissions limited by c, remains an open question.
So, while the answer to the OP question is, wrt some conceivable setups, demonstrably no, wrt Bell tests it's impossible to tell, afaik, if what's happening to the disturbance at one end is affecting the disturbance at the other end via some unknown ftl or spooky action at a distance mechanism.
The Catch-22 for local realists is due to the idea that while entanglement is more or less understandable via locally produced relationship, it can't be viably modeled in terms of the conventional LRHV requirements.
mitchell porter said:
I thought such a theory required an unlikely "preestablished harmony" between the second type of LHVs and the details of measurements?
If the underlying global parameter determining joint detection is a relationship that isn't varying from pair to pair, then there's no need for any "preestablished harmony" in order for joint detection rates to vary, in the predictable and particularly nonlinear way that they do, as the global measurement parameter varies. For example, in the case of optical tests where you're dealing with pairs of polarization entangled photons you would expect the joint detection rate, which is a measurement of intensity, to vary as it's observed to vary as a nonlinear function of the angular difference between the polarizer settings.