3.1. Role of Cardinality
The most evident and most important yet entirely innocuous looking formation of a Vorob’ev cyclicity is related to assumptions about cardinalities, in particular, the measurement of the set of different elements of physical reality (different ) as compared with the measurement of the set of actual- or computer model measurements.
Take the example of
model elements of physical reality that Mermin used (his eight combinations of green and red flashes [
12]) and allow further for
(model) measurements. Then, assuming that Einstein’s elements are emitted randomly and independently of the polarizer angle-pairs, the
in Equation (5) are all about the same, independent of the index
that denotes the different polarizer angles. One can easily see this fact by reordering the MC pair products
with the given index
in the following way. We know that each such product sequence consists of more than
repeated occurrences of the same eight model elements of physical reality. We may, therefore, represent the products
by stacks of MC-array products
for each index
and just have a few “leftovers” of the order of
that cannot be ordered that way. The identical stacks for all
lead to the combinatorial cyclicity, which in turn enforces the Bell–CHSH inequalities, independent of any probabilistic law of nature that determines a correlation between the functions
. Any given number
also enforces the Bell–CHSH inequalities and Malus-type correlations cannot change this fact.
The power of the assumption of a given number
of different
becomes clear if we consider the performance of four Bell–CHSH experiments, each with one given polarizer angle-pair, on four different planets. Then, if we know the functions
of Equation (5) on three planets, the Bell–CHSH inequality limits the averages on the fourth planet. Mermin [
12] maintains that he has used only local laws of nature, but his results (inequalities of the Bell–CHSH-type) have a nonlocal consequence. The reason is that his innocuous assumption of only eight different
leads to nonlocal connections.
Now, consider the case of having different and measurements. Does a Malus-type correlation law then have any consequences or do we again have the Bell–CHSH limitations for the correlation? The answer to this question can be studied most efficiently through Monte Carlo Computer Experiments (MCCE).
We have carried out two series of MCCEs using the CHSH polarizer orientations that lead to the largest violation of the CHSH inequality for the polarizer angle differences: and for all simulations.
In the first series, we used
and started with
, increasing by factors of 10 up to
. In addition, an MCCE with always new
λ was carried out, which approaches the outcome of the Fundamental Model of Probability for
. The upper half of
Figure 1 shows the mean values and standard deviations (error bars) of the CHSH-term. The lower half shows the corresponding mean of the averages
for given polarizer angle-pairs. We always have the marginal averages
and
for any polarizer angle; for example, we have for
and
values of
and
.
For the second series of MCCEs, we used
and varied the number of measurements from
by factors of 10 up to
. The upper half of
Figure 2 shows the mean value and standard deviation of the CHSH-term of Equation (6) and in the lower half the averages
for a given polarizer angle-pair with the standard deviation given as error bars. The marginal averages are again about zero.
In both Monte Carlo series of computer experiments, two regimes can be distinguished: if the number of different values is significantly larger than the number of computer “measurements” , then the averages follow the QM prediction and the CHSH-term is close to the quantum result of 2.82 and violates the CHSH inequality. If is significantly smaller than , then the CHSH inequality is fulfilled and the CHSH term of the four product averages differ from the QM prediction.
Thus, it appears to be entirely clear that what matters for violations of Bell–CHSH is the relation of the number of model measurements to the number of different model elements of physical reality . If , the Malus type law that we have imposed by using Equations (3) and (4) always wins and the Bell–CHSH inequalities are violated, while for the Bell–CHSH inequalities always win and the Malus-type law plays no significant role.
An interesting point has surfaced in the course of these investigations. The computer model is locally deterministic if the Malus law is implemented exactly the way we have described it above. Such implementation can certainly be made if we use four different pairs of computers at four different places, one computer pair for each pair of polarizer angles and each pair supplied by a different source of random numbers from the interval [−1, +1]. The Bell–CHSH inequalities lead to a nonlocal effect in this case. The averages that are obtained at the four different locations are not independent of each other. Thus, proofs of Bell–CHSH like those of Mermin unwittingly introduce a nonlocality, because they use a given number of elements of physical reality that leads to a combinatorial symmetry, which we investigate next using our Monte Carlo simulations.
3.2. Role of Cyclicity, a Combinatorial Symmetry
The importance of Vorob’ev’s topological–combinatorial cyclicity [
11] for the four CHSH-type experiments may be investigated by suppressing the combinatorial symmetry artificially in the MC computer experiments. It appears that Bell–CHSH have been dealing with a very subtle symmetry that may be broken for a variety of innocuous reasons because it does not necessarily correspond to a law of nature, although it was mistakenly assumed to follow exclusively from locality and determinism. However, the combinatorial symmetry occurs in the computer experiments if and only if the results
occurring for the polarizer angle-pair
corresponding to
are stored in the same array
as the results
for the angle-pair
corresponding to
(similar arguments apply to the arrays
,
and
), which does not follow from the premises of locality and determinism. We have already seen in the previous section that these combinatorial symmetry requirements (used in all Bell–CHSH proofs) are true only for
(in which case about all the
can be suitable reordered) and are false for
, because in this latter case, nearly all the
are different and cannot be reordered. Bell–CHSH and all their followers did not notice the cardinality dependence of their inequality. They claimed their inequalities follow from their use of a local-deterministic model. We discuss their reasoning in the next section in detail. The combinatorial symmetry is made impossible by creating eight arrays,
,
,
,
,
,
and
,
(instead of four arrays
,
,
and
in which the respective function values
and
are stored in separate arrays
and
for polarizer setting pairs
and
(an analog separation of arrays is used for the other polarizer pairs by
,
,
,
and
,
).
Figure 3 gives the CHSH-term (upper row) and the data averages (lower row) as function of
(left) and
(right) for the case of removed combinatorial symmetry. The CHSH-inequality is always violated and the data averages follow the QM predictions independent of the cardinalities of
versus
. The error bars are the standard deviations over 10 simulations of
experiments. These results demonstrate that combinatorial symmetry is mandatory to fulfill the CHSH-inequality.
In contrast, enforcing the combinatorial symmetry and always using the same
(for
must fulfill the CHSH inequality.
Figure 4 gives the CHSH-term (left) and the data averages (right) with fixed
and increasing
from 10 to 10
7 using the standard deviations as error bar. As expected, the CHSH inequality is always fulfilled.
A further step is to use the same
but suppress the combinatorial symmetry as described above by using separated arrays to memorize the settings of previous MC experiments.
Figure 5 shows the CHSH term and the data averages for a simulation with identical
and suppressed combinatorial symmetry. Without combinatorial symmetry, even using the same
for the set of four CHSH experiments leads to a violation of the CHSH inequality and results that follow the predictions of quantum mechanics.