| What I wrote was confusing. Heisenberg says that we cannot know both position and velocity with arbitrary precision. This is inherent to any wave-based system. BUT, this only means we cannot know (as in theoretically prevented) all of the variables to arbitrary enough precision to accurately predict the outcome. It doesn’t mean, however, that there aren’t any initial conditions even prior to measurement. Nor does Bell’s inequality doesn’t negate this. Note Lso that non-local does not imply that causality is broken (you cannot transmit information FTL via decoherence). In fact, one of the more interesting (and unexplored) possibilities is that the boolean-logic law of excluded middle is wrong. This is because Bell’s derivation is pure arithmetic and logic. It’s the one bit of QM that any student can follow. Lest this is handwaved away, know that there are entire branches of constructivist mathematics that do just this. |
This is the EPR argument.
> Bell’s inequality doesn’t negate this.
Bell shows that there is no measurement you can make, even in principle, that will give you the information you need to predict the outcome of a quantum experiment.
You can, if you wish, insist that those initial conditions exist notwithstanding our inability to measure them even in principle. But you could equally well insist that the outcomes of quantum experiments are determined by an invisible pink unicorn. Both hypotheses are equally unfalsifiable (if QM is correct).
I have actually coined the term IPU (Invisible Pink Unicorn) as an intentionally derisive description of hypothetical constructs that cannot be measured even in principle. Many QM interpretations contain IPUs. Bohmiam particle positions, for example, are an IPU.