Einstein, Podolsky[?] and Rosen[?] argued in 1935 that such a theory was not only possible, but in fact necessary, proposing the EPR Paradox as proof. In 1964, John Bell showed, through his famous Bell inequalities, that the kind of theory proposed by Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen made different experimental predictions than orthodox quantum mechanics. Experiment showed the orthodox account to be correct, and the hope for a so-called local hidden variable theory had to be abandoned.
However, non-local theories, which are theories that allow systems to interact over distances with speeds greater than the speed of light, were not ruled out. In fact, the hidden variable theory created in 1952 by David Bohm, the so-called Bohmian mechanics, is a non-local hidden variable theory that is thought to be empirically equivalent to orthodox quantum mechanics. It still enjoys a modest popularity among physicists.
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