One of Yakir Aharonov's endlessly captivating physics ideas is the conjecture
that two axioms, namely relativistic causality ("no superluminal signalling")
and nonlocality, so nearly contradict each other that a unique theory - quantum
mechanics - reconciles them. But superquantum (or "PR-box") correlations imply
that quantum mechanics is not the most nonlocal theory (in the sense of
nonlocal correlations) consistent with relativistic causality. Let us consider
supplementing these two axioms with a minimal third axiom: there exists a
classical limit in which macroscopic observables commute. That is, just as
quantum mechanics has a classical limit, so must any generalization of quantum
mechanics. In this classical limit, PR-box correlations violate relativistic
causality. Generalized to all stronger-than-quantum bipartite correlations,
this result is a derivation of Tsirelson's bound without assuming quantum
mechanics.Comment: for a video of this talk at the Aharonov-80 Conference in 2012 at
Chapman University, see quantum.chapman.edu/talk-10, published in Quantum
Theory: A Two-Time Success Story (Yakir Aharonov Festschrift), eds. D. C.
Struppa and J. M. Tollaksen (New York: Springer), 2013, pp. 205-21