Classical Bell's Inequalities: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Imported from text file |
Imported from text file |
||
| Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
An example of a classical system violating Bell's inequalities is discussed. Existence of a classical system violating Bell's inequalities takes away the ?mysterious? property usually called ?non-locality? which according to some characterizes quantum-mechanical systems.[[Category:Scientific Paper]] | An example of a classical system violating Bell's inequalities is discussed. Existence of a classical system violating Bell's inequalities takes away the ?mysterious? property usually called ?non-locality? which according to some characterizes quantum-mechanical systems. | ||
[[Category:Scientific Paper|classical bell 's inequalities]] | |||
Latest revision as of 12:08, 1 January 2017
| Scientific Paper | |
|---|---|
| Title | Classical Bell\'s Inequalities |
| Read in full | Link to paper |
| Author(s) | Vesselin C Noninski |
| Keywords | {{{keywords}}} |
| Published | 2003 |
| Journal | PhilSci-Archive |
| No. of pages | 5 |
Read the full paper here
Abstract
An example of a classical system violating Bell's inequalities is discussed. Existence of a classical system violating Bell's inequalities takes away the ?mysterious? property usually called ?non-locality? which according to some characterizes quantum-mechanical systems.