Thanks, Eliezer, and fair enough, but in the context of "Hello! You may have been directed to this page because you said something along the lines of Science has disproved the idea of an objective reality," ...
I'm not sure how the Seed article on Zeilinger's work fits in here:
"But whereas Bell's work could not distinguish between realism and locality, Leggett's did. The two could be tested."
"If quantum mechanics described the data, then the lights' polarizations didn't exist before being measured. Realism in quantum mechanics woul...
With that kind of introduction, I thought you were going to address the Seed article:
http://www.seedmagazine.com/news/2008/06/the_reality_tests_1.php
on realism.
I had a feeling it would come down to "it depends what you mean by realism" even though (1) realism as "preexisting properties" seems to have been disproved on a quantum level and (2) macrorealism apparently also fails.
So I'm supposed to ignore Leggett and Zeilinger? I did go read Quantum Non-Realism and came away non-enlightened, largely because of the use of the word "consciousness" which seems to be as fuzzy for physicists as quantum reality is for philosophers.
I don't think Zeilinger was "philosophizing" -- they were trying to hire an actual philospher.