CHAPTER 4What it means
In which the boring story dies, the universe turns out to be stranger than Einstein could accept, and three experimentalists win the Nobel Prize for proving the Bell violations.
§4.1Back to the two stories
Remember the two stories from chapter 1?
- The boring story. Each particle leaves the source with sealed instructions that determine its answer at every dial setting. No signals cross between Alice and Bob. The "instant correlation" is just a shared origin showing up at both ends.
- The spooky story. When Alice measures her particle, something — some influence, some non-local connection — somehow reaches across the gap and affects what Bob's particle does. Faster than light, if necessary.
Bell's argument is essentially a logical wedge between these two. Either the boring story is right, in which case the experiment must respect his bound. Or the boring story is wrong. Experiment violates the bound. Therefore: the boring story is wrong.
That sentence took thirty years to write down rigorously, and another thirty years to actually test in a laboratory tight enough to be unambiguous. But it's the entire content of Bell's theorem, and it's the reason the next sentence has to be uncomfortable.
§4.2The universe is non-local
The boring story can't be how nature works. Some part of it has to give. The mainstream conclusion is that the part that gives is the locality assumption built into the sealed-envelope story.
That is: distant entangled particles are not independent in the way two gloves in two boxes are independent. They are part of a single, indivisible quantum thing. When Alice measures her particle, the correlations involving Bob's particle are fixed in a way no local envelope can explain. This is the "spooky action at a distance" Einstein dismissed. He was wrong to think a local envelope could remove it.
Take a moment to feel how strange that is. The two particles can be on opposite sides of the galaxy. Light couldn't cross between them in millions of years. And yet the correlations between Alice's record and Bob's record are stronger than any local pre-written instruction sheet allows. The universe, in the very deepest sense, does not factor neatly into independent local pieces. Whatever reality "is," it isn't built out of strictly local parts.
§4.3But you can't send messages
The natural worry: if Alice's measurement instantaneously affects Bob's particle, surely she can use the entangled pair as a faster-than-light telephone? Just wiggle her dial in some pattern; whatever non-local thing reaches Bob's end conveys her message.
The answer is no, and this is one of the most subtle features of the whole story.
Look at Bob's notebook in isolation, before he meets Alice to compare. His flashes come up ▲ and ▼ in roughly equal numbers, with no detectable pattern, regardless of what Alice has been doing on the other side. He cannot tell, from his data alone, whether Alice has even turned her apparatus on. The "non-local" effect appears only when Alice and Bob meet up later and lay their notebooks side by side. And meeting up requires moving the notebooks, which can only happen at sub-light speed.
So we have something genuinely strange: a real, measurable, non-local correlation that cannot be used to send a signal. The universe seems to have been carefully arranged so that the strict no-faster-than-light rule of special relativity stays intact at the level of information, even though the correlations refuse any purely local explanation. Most physicists find this beautiful. Others find it frustrating. Almost everyone finds it strange.
§4.4Sixty years of experiments
For most of the 1960s and 70s, Bell's paper was treated as a curiosity. The physics establishment had moved on; quantum mechanics worked, and quibbles about its interpretation were filed under "philosophy." Then in 1972, Stuart Freedman and an unsung young Berkeley physicist named John Clauser actually built the apparatus and did the experiment. The result agreed with quantum mechanics; Bell's bound was violated.
The experimental work that followed is one of the great slow-burn stories in 20th-century physics. Each round of experiment closed off some specific way the previous result might have been a fluke — what experimentalists call a "loophole." Maybe the dial settings were correlated with the source somehow? Maybe inefficient detectors were biased toward the matching pairs? The main experimental loopholes kept getting plugged. The verdict, after every closure, was the same: Bell was right.
Aspect's 1982 work was the most cinematic. He arranged for the dial settings to be switched after the particles were already in flight — fast enough that no signal travelling at the speed of light could have coordinated the two sides in time. The bound was still violated. Whatever's going on, the particles aren't checking with each other before answering.
By 2015, three groups (in Delft, Vienna, and at NIST in Boulder) had independently performed "loophole-free" Bell tests, closing the main locality and detection loopholes at once. For ordinary local hidden-variable explanations, the verdict was unambiguous.
§4.5The 2022 Nobel Prize
In October 2022, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics jointly to Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser, and Anton Zeilinger "for experiments with entangled photons, establishing the violation of Bell inequalities and pioneering quantum information science."
Notice who they chose. Not the theorists who proved the inequalities; experimentalists, who did the real-world tests. Bell himself died in 1990 of a stroke, and the Nobel is not awarded posthumously. The award marked the moment when the physics community formally agreed that the strangeness Bell had identified is no longer a philosophical curiosity but an established empirical fact about the universe.
It also marked the moment when "quantum information" — the field that tries to use non-local quantum correlations for things like quantum cryptography and quantum computing — graduated from speculative to mainstream. The same correlations that worried Einstein are now being commercialised.
§4.6What's still open
Bell's theorem closes one specific question: can a local theory with hidden variables reproduce quantum mechanics? No. But it doesn't end every conceivable retreat. A few escape routes are still seriously discussed by people who don't want to accept non-locality:
- Superdeterminism. What if the dial settings Alice and Bob "choose" are not actually free? What if every measurement choice in the universe is correlated with everything else, going all the way back to the Big Bang? Then a hidden-variable theory can reproduce quantum mechanics — but only by abandoning the assumption that scientists can choose their experiments freely. Most physicists find this option deeply unappealing, since it makes experimental science itself look like an illusion. But it's logically consistent.
- Many-worlds. Maybe every measurement outcome does happen — just in different "branches" of the universe. There is no single collapse event that picks one flash for the whole universe; Alice and Bob later compare records inside the same branch. Local wavefunction evolution is preserved at the cost of believing that every quantum outcome creates a copy of you watching it. Surprising number of physicists take this seriously.
- QBism / participatory interpretations. Reject the idea that quantum states describe the world at all; treat them as descriptions of an experimenter's information. The "non-local correlation" becomes a fact about coordinated knowledge, not coordinated reality. Hard to formalise, small but persistent following.
The mainstream consensus, after sixty years, is roughly this: the universe is non-local in a precise and limited sense; the non-locality cannot be exploited to send messages; and the philosophical mess that remains is the price you pay for having a theory as predictively successful as quantum mechanics. Bell's contribution was not to settle the philosophy — it was to show, definitively, that the philosophy could no longer be ignored.
§4.7Where to read next
If you've stayed with us this far, here are some good next steps:
- David Mermin, "Bringing Home the Atomic World" (1981). A short, elegant popularisation of exactly the experiment we've just walked through. Mermin invents a board-game version of the Bell experiment that captures the strangeness with no math at all. It's the gentlest possible introduction. Try to find the Physics Today reprint.
- Leonard Susskind, Quantum Mechanics: The Theoretical Minimum. A textbook for non-physicists who want to actually learn the math, but presented patiently from scratch. About 350 pages, takes maybe a month at a relaxed pace, and ends with you genuinely understanding entanglement.
- Sean Carroll, Something Deeply Hidden. A clear, opinionated book defending the many-worlds interpretation. Whether or not you end up agreeing with him, it's a great way to think more carefully about what Bell's theorem leaves open.
- Tim Maudlin, Quantum Non-Locality and Relativity. The serious philosophical book on what Bell's theorem actually says about the universe. Harder than the others; aimed at people who want to dig.
Sixty years after Bell wrote his six pages, you're a member of the first generation that's allowed to take their conclusions for granted. The universe is non-local. Entanglement is a real, measurable, non-classical resource. The dispute Einstein and Bohr could only argue about is now a routine experimental fact. That's worth knowing.