Hi All,
I'm hoping someone here will be able to answer what I hope isn't too dumb-dumb entry level stuff on QM, but I see much ballyhoo about entanglement and I think I'm definitely missing something.
The punchline of my question is this: how do we know when doing the typical remote measurement of one of a pair of entangled particles that there's really spooky action at a distance rather than that our experimental set-up caused the two to take on (anti-?)correlated properties that we later uncover?
Thanks in advance!
Answer a dumb-dumb question about QM?
Re: Answer a dumb-dumb question about QM?
I would suggest you to ask this question on the Physics Forum because your question is purely technical and has nothing to do with philosophy
"Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kanzas anymore" Dorothy
Re: Answer a dumb-dumb question about QM?
Ah, that looks like a good spot to ask, thanks.