If people "shrink down to electrons", then they behave exactly like electrons
It only experiences something when it interacts with the screen it hits, and it only hits the screen at once place... per world. Exactly the distribution of places it hits across the possible worlds is what changes from its wavefunction's self-interaction, but it had a range of possible places it could have hit anyway before that. — Pfhorrest
It only experiences something when it interacts with the screen it hits, and it only hits the screen at once place... per world. Exactly the distribution of places it hits across the possible worlds is what changes from its wavefunction's self-interaction, but it had a range of possible places it could have hit anyway before that.
— Pfhorrest
But it's a little person right, so it has eyes :-), what does it experience before the wavefunction collapses/splits, all possible positions at once... and then they all but one disappear when it hits the screen? — ChatteringMonkey
The OP question is not as stupid as it sounds. I would reformulate it as "What does it feel like to be in a quantum superposition state?" There is some discussion of this and related questions in the literature on the foundations of quantum mechanics. — SophistiCat
The OP question is not as stupid as it sounds. I would reformulate it as "What does it feel like to be in a quantum superposition state?" — SophistiCat
Living cats don't smell poison.what does it experience before the wavefunction collapses/splits, all possible positions at once... and then they all but one disappear when it hits the screen? — ChatteringMonkey
Living cats don't smell poison. — InPitzotl
Normal sized Schrodinger's cat is in superposition; why would mini-electron sized cats be different?Maybe hypothetical mini-electron sized cats do? — ChatteringMonkey
Normal sized Schrodinger's cat is in superposition; why would mini-electron sized cats be different? — InPitzotl
"Normal sized living cat" is not in superposition; "normal sized cat" is (or more realistically, the contents of the box). The box is in a superposition between two states; A and B. State A has a living cat that smells no poison. State B has a dead cat in it. In MWI terms, once "Schrodinger" opens the box, he just gets entangled with this system. Then you have State A, Schrodinger sees a living cat, and State B, Schrodinger sees a dead cat. Then, the Schrodinger who saw a living cat "smells no poison" (sees no broken vials).If a normal living cat is in superposition why doesn't it smell poison then? — ChatteringMonkey
"Normal sized living cat" is not in superposition; "normal sized cat" is (or more realistically, the contents of the box). The box is in a superposition between two states; A and B. State A has a living cat that smells no poison. State B has a dead cat in it. — InPitzotl
Which one? Dead cats tell to tales, but the living cat smells no poison. (make sure to see all edits above). — InPitzotl
Not quite. The cat branched when it "observed" (smelled) a system in superposition (between poison in the air and no poison in the air, resulting from broken vial and no broken vial, due to detection/no detection). That observation entangles the cat with this system, but that makes two "worlds". To the one Schrodinger, those two worlds are in superposition, until he opens the box; then his wavefunction entangles with this result, branching him into two Schrodingers.So the branches are allready there before they 'branch'? — ChatteringMonkey
Not quite. The cat branched when it "observed" (smelled) a system in superposition (between poison in the air and no poison in the air, resulting from broken vial and no broken vial, due to detection/no detection). That observation entangles the cat with this system, but that makes two "worlds". To the one Schrodinger, those two worlds are in superposition, until he opens the box; then his wavefunction entangles with this result, branching him into two Schrodingers. — InPitzotl
Correct. The worlds aren't fundamental; they're emergent. Also the name MWI is a bit of a misnomer; MWI doesn't posit multiple worlds... it posits that wavefunction collapse isn't "real". That leaves only the evolving wavefunction. In fact, the title of Everett's seminal work is "The Theory of the Universal Wavefunction".Does this mean that when something branches it doesn't create an 'entire world'? — ChatteringMonkey
You misquoted me — RogueAI
Assume a miracle happens and people shrink down to electrons — RogueAI
Or would it, because it has eyes instantly collapse/split because it gets entangled with itself and as such never see all positions at once? — ChatteringMonkey
Presumably, that depends mainly on your interpretation of the equations, i.e. on metaphysical speculation. If it's many worlds, maybe you are an infinite number of persons at once. — Echarmion
'What did you do to the cat, Erwin? — Wayfarer
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.