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Physics
Quantum Physics
Quantum Interpretations and Foundations
Can Special Relativity Explain the Alice and Bob Spin Measurement Paradox?
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[QUOTE="martinbn, post: 6823658, member: 252793"] Coming back to this, which of course is true. The point that I was trying to make was different. Given an event A, all other events can be divided into those in the future of A, in the past of A, and the rest. You can also choose a time coordinate, which gives a label to all events. Then all events can be divided into those with time coordinate bigger than that of A, smaller than that of A or equal to that of A. In classical physics these two divisions are the same (or at least they can be, it depends on how you choose the time parameter). In relativity they are definitely not the same. My statement is that often in the Bell type discussion people forget that. In classical physics if an event B has time coordinate bigger than that of A, then B is in the causal future of A and can be influenced by A. In relativity if B has bigger time coordinate it doesn't mean that it is in the causal future of A. But in these discussions some people try to use that as one of their steps in their arguments to conclude that there are possible influences from A to B. [/QUOTE]
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Quantum Interpretations and Foundations
Can Special Relativity Explain the Alice and Bob Spin Measurement Paradox?
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