Today's post, Bell's Theorem: No EPR "Reality" was originally published on 04 May 2008. A summary (taken from the LW wiki):
(Note: This post was designed to be read as a stand-alone, if desired.) Originally, the discoverers of quantum physics thought they had discovered an incomplete description of reality - that there was some deeper physical process they were missing, and this was why they couldn't predict exactly the results of quantum experiments. The math of Bell's Theorem is surprisingly simple, and we walk through it. Bell's Theorem rules out being able to locally predict a single, unique outcome of measurements - ruling out a way that Einstein, Podolsky, and Rosen once defined "reality". This shows how deep implicit philosophical assumptions can go. If worlds can split, so that there is no single unique outcome, then Bell's Theorem is no problem. Bell's Theorem does, however, rule out the idea that quantum physics describes our partial knowledge of a deeper physical state that could locally produce single outcomes - any such description will be inconsistent.
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It's really simple. The hidden variables are not local. General Relativity does not apply in the case of the particles below a certain size. Can you create a logically consistent belief set such that the FTL particles are not FTL and really just existing in multiple states at once? Yes.
You can also say that on 4/25/12, up is down and down is up so I fell up and couldn't get back down again.
IE there are infinite labeling systems for every set of observations. The minimal set has the least computational cost to consider, and thus is easier for people to process. Some people however, tribals to be specific, are more interested in protecting legacies than they are with using the computationally cheaper belief set. The cost is reduced frequency of new inspirations of understanding.
I assume that this is your personal model, given the lack of references. Feel free to flesh it out so that it makes new quantifiable testable predictions.
My personal crackpot index counter clicks like mad after reading this.