Ok, so you guys accept that entangled particles obey laws of conservation such that they instantaneously communicate over vast distances? And you are willing to accept that because experimental data shows you it is true, despite the weirdness?
Yet you are catogorically unwilling to accept that light, despite it's observed weirdness, could possibly be attributed with simalarities surrounding conservation of energy. I haven't even claimed in a nasty way that I'm right and i'm more than happy to accept that I'm wrong but you guys seem to love jumping at the chance to ridicule any suggestion which falls outside of orthodox textbook physics because it's an easy hit for you. You get more of a kick from making accusations of trolling or calling someone a joker than actually exploring the potential for evolving ideas, which I agree, are only ideas. I get that; no problem.
I came on this forum several years ago and met the same widespread resistance to the notion that time doesn't exist. Back then, I was amongst a very tiny handful with similar views and yet now, following several years of debate, it appears that far more people hold the same view - that time doesn't exist. I don't know how long it will take for mainstream science to acknowledge the concept of a timeless Universe and write it into the textbooks but it's certainly on its way in terms of gathering pace and evolving.
I happen to hold a "view", an "idea" that waves don't actually exist. Ever. But, like time, I don't think you guys are ready for it yet. The more i think about it, the more I see waves as a mathematical and graphical representation of what we, as observers, receive from a source. i have gone as far as to suggest that you can't actually ever see a wave. You can't see it from side-on and you never actually get to see it even when it's landed and interacted. Because at that point the wave (whatever it is) has transformed and collapsed instantaneously to a photon, which, incidentally can't be detected in flight either.
So I hold this "idea" and share it with you, and firstly you disagree, which is fine, but secondly you have no proof to offer in terms of scientific experiment to show that we have actually ever observed an em wave, and furthermore you don't want to explore any notion that, actually, perhaps it doesn't even exist in the form that we first thought in the first place. I'm simply suggesting that there is still a possibility that light itself could have similar properties to entangled particles and some form of instantaneous communication could be at work. The fact that waves might not exist is a premise which leads nicely to the fact that the speed of light is always viewed as a constant, but I guess you're looking for something more solid, which i also understand.
So I want you, the experts, to show me experimental evidence of observations of a wave in flight WITHOUT the wave having collapsed to a photon at a point of interaction. Can you do that? You showed me a polarising filter, but i'm afraid i'm not buying that one. You showed me a prism - nope. Show me a downconverter, and i won't buy that one either. So is there any way to look at a wave as it is - a wave? I hope you can help me put this one to bed. Thanks.