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12.1 Reality and locality 12.1 Reality and locality
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12.2 Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen paradox 12.2 Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen paradox
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12.3 Bohr’s reply 12.3 Bohr’s reply
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12.4 Bell’s inequality 12.4 Bell’s inequality
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12 Is reality really real?
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Published:September 2023
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Abstract
The first round of the Einstein–Bohr debates took place when Einstein challenged Bohr’s principle of complementarity at the Solvay conference in 1927 and Bohr successfully defended it. The most serious challenge, however, came in 1935 through a paper by Einstein, Podolsky, and Rosen (EPR) when they argued about the incompleteness of quantum mechanics through a gedanken experiment motivating an approach based on hidden variables. In this chapter, the EPR argument about the incompleteness of quantum mechanics and Bohr’s reply to it, are presented. The ultimate answer came almost 30 years later, almost ten years after Einstein’s death, and the answer was nothing what Einstein would have expected. Bell’s inequality and the subsequent Bell–CHSH inequality, that are satisfied by all theories based on the “self-evident truths” of reality and locality are discussed. The startling result that quantum mechanics violates Bell’s inequality and that the experimental results are in agreement with the prediction of quantum mechanics is presented.
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