Interesting discussion. I recently completed a 1000 mile tour of the Mojave desert area of the Southwest United States, about 70% dirt road, 30% paved roads. Initially, I ran Schwalbe Marathon Extreme 2.25 (57-559) at about 42 PSI (about 2.8 bar) for the rear and 40 PSI (about 2.7 bar) for the front. When I had problems with sand, I deflated to 30 PSI (about 2.0 bar) for both tires, which helped a lot. Later, when I returned to the paved road, I reinflated back to the original pressures, then deflated again when I hit sand, etc. This got old fast, so I finally decided to deflate to just 36 PSI (about 2.5 bar) and see how that worked on sand. And it seemed to work just as well as 30 PSI. Then I left the tires at 36 PSI when I returned to pavement and the tires appeared to run as fast as at higher pressure. So that is some field experience in favor of lower pressures.
This tour was on a MTB. I just ordered a Nomad MK2 and will have it fitted with Schwalbe Mondial 2.15 (55-559). I will probably run these at the same pressure as the Extremes, or maybe slightly higher, say 38 PSI (about 2.6 bar) for the rear and slightly lower for the front, say 34 PSI (about 2.4 bar). My weight is about 85 kg dressed and a typical load would include 6kg of camping gear, 4 kg of food and 12 or so liters of water, so the total load would be 107 kg above the bike weight (about 18kg I imagine). 125 kg - Schwalbe's 75kg = 50kg. Divide this load in half gives 25kg additional per tire above Schwalbe's base loading. 35 PSI recommend pressure for 55-559 * 1.25 = 44 PSI. This sounds right for someone traveling exclusively on paved roads. But for someone like me, who is mostly on dirt, with much of that dirt being sand, 35 PSI or so is probably better.