Topic: Bell's Theorem
TBRich's photo
Thu 03/05/09 12:46 PM
I thought I understood it, but after reading the Scientific American article on entanglement and non-locality I got lost. Shame Robert Anton Wilson is dead, because he explained it well, and so- who here can re-re-explain it to me?

Jungian101's photo
Thu 03/05/09 12:54 PM
locality is dead. that's all

no photo
Thu 03/05/09 12:54 PM
Edited by Bushidobillyclub on Thu 03/05/09 12:57 PM

I thought I understood it, but after reading the Scientific American article on entanglement and non-locality I got lost. Shame Robert Anton Wilson is dead, because he explained it well, and so- who here can re-re-explain it to me?
Sounds like you do understand it then hehehe.


Essentially it points out that QM is incomplete becuase of this contradiction that is created via QM entanglement.

locality is dead. that's all
Only is specific cases, which makes nature all the more preponderous.




TBRich's photo
Fri 03/06/09 11:49 AM
Dudes, I work 12 hour shifts, my sleep cycle is way off, my mind is usually in a fuzz. Until I get another job and real sleep could you please kindegarten it for me. Sorry, So far... non-local influence, is there a why and how or just an observation? Is it just at the QM level? Or seen in a Newtonian level? Dudes, I am so sleepy all the f*ing time and my brain is yoghurt.

no photo
Sun 03/08/09 10:45 PM
To tell you the truth I am fairly ignorant of the fundamentals of bells theorem, When I first started studying QM I read it in depth, and have not had a chance to refresh.

The jist is that quantum entanglement is counter intuitive. Reality is skrewd.