The consensus from my fairly recent read of Max Tegmark's Multiverse book among physicists is that the MWI is the correct approach — Question
I find it hard to concieve the MWI due to the rather infinite amount of realities there may be; but, so do many mathematicians have qualms with dealing with real infinities. — Question
A quasi deterministic universe always seems more appealing; but, why can't we have determinism within a many worlds interpretation. — Question
[The Copenhagen] approach privileges the external observer, placing that observer in a classical realm that is distinct from the quantum realm of the object observed.
Well, the idea that the universe is spatially infinite was commonplace throughout the history of thought, and among today's cosmologists this is probably much closer to a consensus. — SophistiCat
Of course, I have pretty much a logical positivist bent on such things. — Terrapin Station
Why do you say 'not any longer'? What has changed? — Wayfarer
Schrödinger’s lectures mark the last of a generation that lived with the mysticism controversy. As Marin explains, quantum mechanics up to World War II existed in a predominantly German context, and this culture helped to form the mystical zeitgeist of the time. The controversy died in the second half of the century, when the physics culture switched to Anglo-American. Most contemporary physicists are, like Einstein, realists, and do not believe that consciousness has a role in quantum theory. The dominant modern view is that an observation does not cause an atom to exist in the observed position, but that the observer finds the location of that atom.
They tend to enjoy the results of technological progress more than questions about what a scientific theory might mean about the nature of the world — Moliere
A quasi deterministic universe always seems more appealing; but, why can't we have determinism within a many worlds interpretation. — Question
There needs to be empirical evidence backing it up at some point, or else it will always remain an interpretation. If no empirical evidence can ever be given, then it's not scientific, but it's rather metaphysics, akin to saying we're living inside a simulation. — Marchesk
I find the idea of decoherence too at odds with the MWI to take the MWI seriously. — Question
The many worlds interpretation, if taken at all literally (rather than being taken as an instrumental interpretation strictly of the mathematics involved), strikes me as completely ridiculous. — Terrapin Station
The many-worlds interpretation is an interpretation of quantum mechanics that asserts the objective reality of the universal wavefunction and denies the actuality of wavefunction collapse. Many-worlds implies that all possible alternate histories and futures are real, each representing an actual "world" (or "universe"). In layman's terms, the hypothesis states there is a very large — perhaps infinite — number of universes, and everything that could possibly have happened in our past, but did not, has occurred in the past of some other universe or universes. The theory is also referred to as MWI, the relative state formulation, the Everett interpretation, the theory of the universal wavefunction, many-universes interpretation, or just many-worlds.
So if 'many worlds' doesn't invoke 'many worlds', why is it called by that name? ('Invoke' meaning 'to cite or appeal to (someone or something) as an authority for an action or in support of an argument.) — Wayfarer
I had the idea that it was Kepler who discovered the elliptical movement of the planets. — Wayfarer
t was in fact Schrödinger who first discovered the other Worlds, but he was reticent to talk about them, because he knew other people would think he was crazy. — Tom
It was left to Everett to summon the courage to develop the idea, motivated as he was by the desire to unify QM and general relativity. Everett paid the ultimate scientific price for his discovery. — Tom
There has been some progress since Everett. The Born Rule is now dropped as an axiom of QM, decoherence has been discovered, and the quantum computer has been discovered, all as a result of Everett's idea.
Every real system, whether quantum or 'classical' (such as a life-sized cat), is in contact with an external environment -- a messy, noisy collection of atoms whose state can never be perfectly known. This coupling between a quantum system in a superposition and the environment in which it is embedded leads the system to 'collapse' or decay over time into one state or another. This process is known as decoherence.
The rate of decoherence depends on the size of the quantum system. Physicists can now create and maintain quantum particles such as atoms or single photons of light in superpositions for significant periods of time, if the coupling to the environment is weak. For a system as big as a cat, however, comprised of billions upon billions of atoms, decoherence happens almost instantaneously, so that the cat can never be both alive and dead for any measurable instant.
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