2014
DOI: 10.1007/s10773-014-2134-5
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Is Nonlocality Responsible for the Violation of Bell’s Inequalities?

Abstract: Bell's theorem has been widely argued to show that some of the predictions of quantum mechanics which are obtained by applying the Born's rule to a class of entangled states, are not compatible with any local-causal statistical model, via the violation of Bell's inequalities. On the other hand, in the previous work, we have shown that quantum dynamics and kinematics are emergent from a statistical model that is singled out uniquely by the principle of Locality. Here we shall show that the local-causal model su… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…showing that within the statistical model measurement-interaction can be treated in equal footing as the other types of interaction [20,22], we have argued that the objective locality of the model implies no-signaling in the context of measurement. We have thus a class of no-signaling modifications of quantum dynamics which provides an internal mechanism of decoherence in macroscopic regime.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
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“…showing that within the statistical model measurement-interaction can be treated in equal footing as the other types of interaction [20,22], we have argued that the objective locality of the model implies no-signaling in the context of measurement. We have thus a class of no-signaling modifications of quantum dynamics which provides an internal mechanism of decoherence in macroscopic regime.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…This is done by developing a deterministic model for the apparent random behavior of the microscopic world based on a chaotic deviation from infinitesimal stationary action reported in Refs. [18][19][20][21][22]. We have shown in Refs.…”
Section: Motivationmentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…Some analyze assumptions in terms of locality [175, § 8.6] [293,330], causality [175, § 8.7] [331,332] and local causality [333,334]. Whether or not such assumptions necessarily imply counterfactual reasoning is not a straightforward question [335].…”
Section: Bell Inequalities: Much Exploration Of Assumptions But Littlmentioning
confidence: 99%