Quantum theory presents a strange picture of the world, offering
no real account of physical properties apart from observation.
Neils Bohr felt that this reflected a core truth of nature: "There
is no quantum world. There is only an abstract mathematical
description." Among the most significant developments since Bohr 's
day has been the theorem of John S. Bell. It is important to
consider whether Bell 's analysis supports such a denial of
microrealism. In this book, we evaluate the situation in terms of
an early work of Erwin Schr dinger. Doing so, we see how Bell 's
theorem is conceptually related to the Conway and Kochen Free Will
theorem and also to all the major anti-realism efforts. It is easy
to show that none of these analyses imply the impossibility of
objective realism. We find that Schr dinger 's work leads to the
derivation of a new series of theoretical proofs and potential
experiments, each involving entanglement, the link between
particles in some quantum systems..
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