Non-Boolean Hidden Variables model reproduces Quantum Mechanics'
predictions for Bell's experiment
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2005.10367v5
- Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2022 23:09:26 GMT
- Title: Non-Boolean Hidden Variables model reproduces Quantum Mechanics'
predictions for Bell's experiment
- Authors: Alejandro Hnilo
- Abstract summary: Theory aimed to violate Bell's inequalities must start by giving up Boolean logic.
"Hard" problem is to predict the time values when single particles are detected.
"Soft" problem is to explain the violation of Bell's inequalities within (non-Boolean) Local Realism.
- Score: 91.3755431537592
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The experimentally verified violation of Bell's inequalities apparently
implies that at least one of two intuitive beliefs must be false: that effects
propagating at infinite velocity do not exist, and that natural phenomena occur
independently of being observed. Giving up any one of these two beliefs
(usually known together as Local Realism) is controversial. Many theories have
been proposed to reconcile the violation of Bell's inequalities with Local
Realism, but none has been fully successful. In this paper, it is recalled that
any theory aimed to violate Bell's inequalities must start by giving up Boolean
logic. The problem is split in two: the "soft" problem is to explain the
violation of Bell's inequalities within (non-Boolean) Local Realism. The "hard"
problem is to predict the time values when single particles are detected. A
simple hidden variables model is introduced, which solves the soft problem.
This is possible thanks to the use of vectors as the hidden variables and the
operation projection, which do not hold to Boolean logic. This model reconciles
the violation of Bell's inequalities with Local Realism and should end decades
of controversy. Regarding the hard problem, the introduced model is as
incomplete as Quantum Mechanics is. It is argued that solving the hard problem
involves devising a new kind of quantum computer, which should be able to
accept (non-Boolean) hidden variables as input data and replace the statistical
Born's rule with a deterministic threshold condition.
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