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<record version="13" id="368">
 <title>Quantum Paradoxes and Bell's inequalities</title>
 <name>QuantumParadoxesAndBellsInequalities</name>
 <created>2009-01-10 18:35:36</created>
 <modified>2009-02-19 09:28:51</modified>
 <type>Topic</type>
 <creator id="441" name="bci1"/>
 <modifier id="441" name="bci1"/>
 <author id="441" name="bci1"/>
 <classification>
	<category scheme="msc" code="03."/>
	<category scheme="msc" code="03.65.Fd"/>
 </classification>
 <defines>
	<concept>unified local field theory</concept>
	<concept>ULFT</concept>
	<concept>quantum paradoxes</concept>
	<concept>E.P.R</concept>
	<concept>Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox</concept>
 </defines>
 <keywords>
	<term>ULFT</term>
	<term>quantum paradoxes</term>
	<term>E.P.R</term>
	<term>Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox</term>
 </keywords>
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 <content>The following is a contributed topic on known quantum paradoxes

\subsection{Quantum Paradoxes and Bell's Inequalities}

There are two major known quantum `paradoxes':

\begin{enumerate}
 \item The Scr\"odinger's cat paradox, often expressed as the ``Scr\"odinger's cat is neither dead nor alive'', but in fact meaning something quite different;

 \item The \PMlinkexternal{EPR `Paradox'}{http://planetphysics.org/?op=getobj&amp;from=lec&amp;id=119}; several solutions of the E.P.R `paradox' have
been produced: 

 a. Interpretations of experiments with polarized laser beams  
favor nonlocality in quantum systems and in the known, physical Universe thus suggesting that the assumptions of the E.P.R paper are the problem and that there is no paradox; 
 
 b.  An \PMlinkexternal{Unified Local Field Theory (ULFT)}{http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0102101} also claims to solve 
the EPR `paradox' by assuming locality--which obviously conflicts the polarized
laser beam experiments' interpretations. 


\end{enumerate}

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\end{thebibliography}</content>
</record>
