Since measuring one particle in the entangled pair "immediately" influences the other (as their wave function is not separable), is the Buridan's principle related to the case when both particles are measured at the same time?
It's probably tricky to do such an experiment (with the help of Mach-Zehnder interferometer maybe?), nevertheless, I believe the guys who wrote quantum computer simulators had to solve that problem somehow (when playing with the Ekert's QKD algorithm, for instance)?
Since measuring one particle in the entangled pair "immediately" influences the other (as their wave function is not separable), is the Buridan's principle related to the case when both particles are measured at the same time?
It's probably tricky to do such an experiment (with the help of Mach-Zehnder interferometer maybe?), nevertheless, I believe the guys who wrote quantum computer simulators had to solve that problem somehow (when playing with the Ekert's QKD algorithm, for instance)?