Comment on 'The axiom of choice and the no-signalling principle'
Abstract
The main claim of arXiv:2206.08467 is that "functional (deterministic) no-signalling resources can be stronger than probabilistic ones" a certain nonlocal game on a Bell scenario with countably many parties. We disagree and argue that (i) under standard definitions, deterministic no-signalling resources are always probabilistic no-signalling resources; (ii) the deterministic strategy considered in arXiv:2206.08467 can be promoted to a genuinely probabilistic strategy with similar properties and ...
Description / Details
The main claim of arXiv:2206.08467 is that "functional (deterministic) no-signalling resources can be stronger than probabilistic ones" a certain nonlocal game on a Bell scenario with countably many parties. We disagree and argue that (i) under standard definitions, deterministic no-signalling resources are always probabilistic no-signalling resources; (ii) the deterministic strategy considered in arXiv:2206.08467 can be promoted to a genuinely probabilistic strategy with similar properties and (iii) a key step in the derivation in arXiv:2206.08467, claimed to hold for all no-signalling strategies, implicitly assumes measurability, leaving a gap in the argument. We propose measurability assumptions which we conjecture would make this derivation rigorous. Taken together, the phenomenon highlighted in arXiv:2206.08467 is best understood as a difference between measurable and non-measurable no-signalling resources.
Source: arXiv:2604.20756v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.20756v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.20756v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.20756v1
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Apr 23, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
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