First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"The second statement relates... that a common source for both photons of an entangled pair is a common feature in all Aspect-type experiments. ...[T]hese ...insights are sufficient to develop a model of photon entanglement accounting for all features in the experiments."
"[W]e... approach... from a new angle. ...[W]e start from the assumption that quantum optics contains, in its mathematical formalism, the answer.... [T]he conceptual difficulty... has been due to the lack of transparency in its mathematical framework. We can formulate this hypothesis in two distinct statements: 1. Quantum optics is complete. 2. The connection between the two photons is due to their common source."
"One of the most puzzling results in modern physics, based originally on... EPR... is the apparent non-locality of measurements in . The experiments performed on pairs of entangled photons, beginning with the experiments by Alain Aspect in 1982, seem to prove... that the two measurements are not independent. The measurements are usually interpreted in terms of the Bell inequalities which assert that their violation, corresponding to the experimental results and... predictions of quantum optics, amounts to a nonlocal connection... There has been... debate on whether such... implies superluminal effects... for example Maudlin's book. The present consensus is that... no information travels faster than light..."
"[B]y closing the two main loopholes at the same time, three teams have independently confirmed that we must definitely renounce local realism... Although their findings are... no surprise, they crown decades of experimental effort. The results... place several fundamental quantum information schemes... as device-independent and s, on firmer ground."
"In the ensuing decades, experimentalists performed increasingly sophisticated tests of Bell’s inequalities. But these tests have always had at least one “loophole,”..."
"[In] 1964... John Stewart Bell... discovered inequalities that allow an experimental test of the predictions of local realism against those of standard quantum physics."
"In 1935, Albert Einstein, Boris Podolsky, and (EPR) wrote a now famous paper questioning the completeness of the formalism of quantum mechanics. Rejecting the idea that a measurement on one particle in an entangled pair could affect the state of the other—distant—particle, they concluded that one must complete the quantum formalism in order to get a reasonable, "local realist," description of the world. This view says a particle carries... locally, all the properties determining the results of any measurement... (The ensemble of these properties constitutes the particle’s physical reality.)"
"John Bell devoted most of his efforts to conceptual and theoretical questions. Would he have liked that I also stress the importance of the technological revolutions that were, and will be, enabled by the conceptual revolutions? I cannot tell, but we know that he started his career in accelerator design, and that he always showed a profound respect for technological achievements. I like to think that he would have loved quantum-jumps-based s, as well as entangled s."
"As a witness of that period, I am also deeply convinced that John Bell indirectly played a crucial role in the progress of the application of quantum mechanics to individual objects, microscopic and mesoscopic. The example of his , that had led to the recognition of the importance of entanglement, was no doubt an encouragement to those who were contemplating the possibility of developing new approaches, beyond the so-efficient paradigm developed decades earlier. His example opened the gate for new quantum explorations."
"Certainly we do not need quantum mechanics for macroscopic objects, which are well described by classical physics – this is the reason why quantum mechanics seems so foreign to our everyday existence."
"I think it is not an exaggeration to say that the realization of the importance of entanglement and the clarification of the quantum description of single objects have been at the root of a second quantum revolution, and that John Bell was its prophet. And it may well be that this once purely intellectual pursuit will also lead to a new technological revolution."
"The most remarkable feature of Bell's work was undoubtedly the possibility it offered to determine experimentally whether or not Einstein's ideas could be kept. The experimental tests of Bell inequalities gave an unambiguous answer: entanglement cannot be understood as usual correlations, whose interpretation relies on the existence of common properties, originating in a common preparation, and remaining attached to each individual object after separation, as components of their physical reality."
"La principale difficulté pour vulgariser la physique quantique, c'est qu'on ne sait pas très bien comment en fabriquer des images dans notre monde. C'est en ce sens qu'elle est vraiment contre-intuitive."
"We pretend that if I get result +1 here, immediately the photon there is in the state |x>, but if I find -1, immediately the other photon assume[s] another state of polarization... [T]his image is not acceptable for Einstein because it seems as [though] something is going . ...It is by this ...reasoning that Einstein said... "If you want to make sense of this correlation at a distance, you have to accept that before they arrive at the measuring apparatus, the particles have already a property determining the outcome." ...Bohr disagreed immediately. ...I don't know anybody who finds Bohr's reply understandable. It's not a joke, what I'm going to say, although it sounds [like] a joke. Bohr is so cautious in his wording that he makes it almost impossible to understand... Bohr insisted on... complimentarity, and at one point he declared... that "Clarity and truth are complimentary," and he made all efforts to be as true as possible."
"When you look at a vacuum in a quantum theory of fields, it isn't exactly nothing."
"It's very nice to be right sometimes ... it has certainly been a long wait."
"Higgs mechanism should be renamed the “ABEGHHK'tH mechanism”"
"The point came when people were doing things I didn't feel competent to do myself. I'm not being modest, I honestly get lost. I was lucky in spotting what I did when I did, but there comes a point where you realise what you're doing is not going to be much good."
"It’s about understanding! Understanding the world!"
"There is a sort of mythology that grows up about what happened, which is different from what really did happen."
"The way that the background fields generates mass is rather like the way in which when light passes through a transparent medium like glass or water, it gets slowed down. It no longer travels with the fundamental velocity of light c. And that's the way to think of the generation of mass."
"This summer I have discovered something totally useless."
"It was easy in the early nineties to make a list of great things that could be done, now that there was such a convenient source of entangled pairs. Anton's claim to fame is that he went and did them."
"I think there is a need for something completely new. Something that is too different, too unexpected, to be accepted as yet."