And neither does existence (or nature) "need to be philosophically justified". No doubt "god" is a redundant idea (i.e. anti-anxiety placebo), an arbitrary terminus to an infinite regress of a categorically mistaken why-question's own making.The whole concept of God doesn't need to be philosophically justified. — Pantagruel
Carroll argues that the many-worlds theory is the most straightforward approach to understanding quantum mechanics. It accepts the reality of the wave function. In fact, it says that there is one wave function, and only one, for the entire Universe. Further, it states that when an event happens in our world, the other possibilities contained in the wave function do not go away. Instead, new worlds are created, in which each possibility is a reality.
A replica of the world with some differences. Not a change to the world but an actually different world. — Wayfarer
I agree with the comment made by one of the readers on the MWI theory, and the Universal WaveFunctions page in the link.Don’t rush. It’s perplexed many of the greatest physicists of the century. — Wayfarer
I don’t think you understand it. Have read of https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretation — Wayfarer
I notice from it that the first tenet of Carroll's belief system is that 'There is only one world, the natural world.' That is something I find hard to reconcile with Carroll's other role as cheerleader in chief for the many-worlds intepretation of quantum physics.
Carroll argues that the many-worlds theory is the most straightforward approach to understanding quantum mechanics. It accepts the reality of the wave function. In fact, it says that there is one wave function, and only one, for the entire Universe. Further, it states that when an event happens in our world, the other possibilities contained in the wave function do not go away. Instead, new worlds are created, in which each possibility is a reality.
It seems a contradiction to me. — Wayfarer
God theories professed by the armchair philosophy does not give anything practical or useful for the description and understanding of the universe. — Corvus
"World" here just means "branch". It's not the same as a whole separate universe with its own wavefunction. — Kenosha Kid
Everett believed in the literal reality of the other quantum worlds.[22] His son reported that he "never wavered in his belief over his many-worlds theory".[79]
According to Martin Gardner, the "other" worlds of MWI have two different interpretations: real or unreal; he claimed that Stephen Hawking and Steven Weinberg both favour the unreal interpretation.[80] Gardner also claimed that most physicists favour the unreal interpretation, whereas the "realist" view is supported only by MWI experts such as Deutsch and DeWitt. Hawking has said that "according to Feynman's idea", all other histories are as "equally real" as our own, [f] and Gardner reports Hawking saying that MWI is "trivially true".[82] — Wikipedia
The point about 'God theories' is to encourage you to practice compassion and right living. — Wayfarer
The point about 'God theories' is to encourage you to practice compassion and right living. Belief in God is not a scientific argument. Many scientists don't believe in God, others do, and it makes no difference to their work. — Wayfarer
find Seah Carroll a pleasant enough fellow, and he's obviously an ace in his area of expertise but I think he's philosophically pretty shallow. — Wayfarer
That depends on who you ask. — Wayfarer
God theories talk about how the universe had been created too. — Corvus
He is just a quantum physicist. They are not philosophers — Corvus
Not 'how' in any meaningful scientific sense. There's two different creation narratives in Genesis alone. There are thousands of such creation narratives in different cultures. The Hindus have one that the universe was created from a cosmic egg, a single point, the 'bindu'. — Wayfarer
Someone should tell him that. — Wayfarer
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