Talk:Quantum nonlocality

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Article milestones
DateProcessResult
September 1, 2017Good article nomineeNot listed
December 24, 2018Good article nomineeNot listed

Special relativity and its universal speed limit of objects with mass[edit]

I tweaked the introduction with... special relativity and its universal speed limit of objects with mass. 2601:589:4800:9090:D978:A6F1:5F7:FCDA (talk) 16:32, 29 August 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Why? The relevant speed limit is the one for massless objects, in this case photons. I don't understand what you're trying to convey with this sentence. Tercer (talk) 19:16, 29 August 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Somebody rewrote the offending passage, now it's good. Tercer (talk) 08:54, 1 September 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Nonlocality in Computer Simulation[edit]

A computer simulation of quantum mechanics must use a random number generator, in which case it has the Vernam cipher available to deal with Bell's Theorem. It will have buttons to ask for an action replay, a time reversal or a Lorentz transformation, and pressing any of these buttons will have the side effect of reseeding the random number generator so a new sequence of random numbers is generated. We can just get on with computer simulations without fretting about causality. Nothing can catch us out.

This is an original opinion and may breach your guidelines about original research. I am just telling it as it is.

Can the first history paragraph be considered complete?[edit]

To my untrained eye, the first paragraph in the History section seems to leave out a crucial condition for EPR's reasoning: the specific quantum description displayed in the equation applies to entangled particles, doesn't it? Any old collection of objects can't be described by the wave function stated, if there is no entanglement, right? But that's not mentioned (even though most people reading the text supposedly already know that). Wdanbae (talk) 10:16, 17 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]

That equation refers to one specific entangled state. It's not supposed to represent all quantum states, not even all entangled ones. Tercer (talk) 15:30, 17 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Removal[edit]

To further elaborate on the reasons behind this edit: the removed text is based on primary sources making novel claims, and quite recent ones at that. It is also unclear about what the sources are actually claiming (an earlier revision was flat-out incorrect). Moreover, it goes about adding to the article in the wrong way, jamming blurbs about new papers into the intro rather than setting them in their proper conceptual context, as determined by secondary/tertiary sources, and then adding a summary to the intro if the article organization warrants it. (Physical Review A has published 50 papers talking about "contextuality" in the past year, and 138 since the beginning of 2020. It's not our job to write about them all.) Wikipedia already has more than enough disjointed bits of hype scattered through its science articles; we don't need more. XOR'easter (talk) 19:21, 12 May 2023 (UTC)[reply]