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Bell's theorem

All Quotes by Bell's theorem

“I’ve had experts in quantum field theory – people who’ve spent years calculating path integrals of mind-boggling complexity – ask me to explain the Bell inequality to them, or other simple conceptual things like Grover’s algorithm. I felt as if Andrew Wiles had asked me to explain the Pythagorean Theorem.”
— Bell's theorem
“The purpose of the first part is to convince the reader that the formalism leading to Bell's inequalities is very general and reasonable. What is surprising is that such a reasonable formalism conflicts with quantum mechanics. In fact, situations exhibiting a conflict are very rare, and quantum optics is the domain where the most significant tests of this conflict have been carried out”
— Bell's theorem
“The theorem tells you that maybe there must be something happening faster than light, although it pains me even to say that much. The theorem certainly implies that Einstein's concept of space and time, neatly divided up into separate regions by light velocity, is not tenable. But then, to say that there's something going faster than light is to say more than I know.”
— Bell's theorem
“Bell’s theorem is the most profound discovery of science.”
— Bell's theorem
“The gist of Bell's theorem is this: no local model of reality can explain the results of a particular experiment.”
— Bell's theorem
“Bell himself managed to devise such a proof which rejects all models of reality possessing the property of "locality". This proof has since become known as Bells theorem. It asserts that no local model of reality can underlie the quantum facts. Bell's theorem says that reality must be non-local.”
— Bell's theorem
“Physicists continue to debate whether Bell's theorem is airtight or not. However, the real question is not whether Bell can prove beyond doubt that reality is non-local, but whether the world is in fact non-local.”
— Bell's theorem
“No physical theory of local hidden variables can ever reproduce all of the predictions of quantum mechanics.”
— Bell's theorem
“Bell's theorem, for which he is most famous, was more a triumph of character than of intellect. The difficult thing about it was the realization of what was understood and what was not understood in the discussion of hidden variables. Bell's honesty about his own understanding provided the impetus for his formulation and proof of the theorem.”
— Bell's theorem
“At the very least, Bell's Theorem prevents us from interpreting quantum amplitudes as probability in the obvious way. You cannot point at a single configuration, with probability proportional to the squared modulus, and say, "This is what the universe looked like all along."”
— Bell's theorem