this post was submitted on 28 Mar 2025
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I'm pretty ignorant of physics, but isn't it only certain kinds of ways of acting on the first particle that "affect" the other, namely actions that measure a property of one particle that is correlated with the same property's value on the other? At first you don't know the value of either but you know they're correlated; but then when you measure and collapse the wave function on one and discovered a value for the property, you have automatically collapsed the wave function on the other too, yielding a predictably correlated value. If it were just any kind of action that affects the other particle, you'd be able to use it to sent information instantaneously, which you can't do. So it's not quite like how people imagine voodoo dolls: do something to the doll (make a change to it) and the person feels the effect. But perhaps someone who studies this stuff can help clarify.
That's fairly close. The only proviso is there are some ways to affect the results. You can't send actual information along the link, but you can prove they were in communication. That proof requires information from the sending end however. It's only provable once that information is sent. Basically they communicate faster than light, but can't send information faster than light. Entanglement is weird.
Thank you. That is helpful and clear.