What did the Nobel Prize-winning experiments demonstrate?
They showed entangled photons violate Bell inequalities, providing experimental evidence that the universe is not 'locally real'—distant particles can exhibit correlations that defy local hidden-variable explanations.
What do 'locality' and 'realism' mean in this context?
Locality is the idea that objects only affect nearby things and information transfer is limited by distance and time. Realism is the idea that objects have definite states independent of observation; both are challenged by quantum experiments.
How does the double-slit and delayed choice experiments support the simulation idea?
The double-slit shows particles exist as probability waves until measured; the delayed choice variation suggests measurement can retroactively determine past behavior—consistent with a system that 'resolves' states only when observed.
Why are violations of Bell inequalities important?
Bell's theorem turned Einstein's philosophical concerns into a testable prediction. Violating Bell inequalities rules out local hidden-variable explanations and implies nonlocal correlations or a different underlying ontology.
What would count as stronger proof that the universe is a simulation?
Demonstrating that causally distant objects are processed together instantly—showing nonlocal, system-wide causal processing across vast separations—would bolster the case for a simulated or computational substrate.