Nope, nowhere in MW is the claim made that measuring the spin of an electron means "you have to build an entire parallel universe around that one electron, identical in all respects except where the electron went". — tom
Everett asked why, instead of fretting about the cumbersome nature of wavefunction collapse, we don’t just do away with it. What if this collapse is just an illusion, and all the possibilities announced in the wavefunction have a physical reality? Perhaps when we make a measurement we see only one of those realities, yet the others have a separate existence, too.
An existence where? This is where the many worlds come in. Everett himself never used that term, but in the 1970s the physicist Bryce DeWitt started championing his proposals, and it was DeWitt who argued that the alternative outcomes of the experiment must exist in a parallel reality: another world. You measure the path of an electron, and in this world it seems to go this way, but in another world it went that way.
Everett (actually bare quantum formalism) claims that any environment that interacts with the cat in superposition will itself enter a superposed state, — tom
My apologies, I misread where Wayfarer's quote came from. It came from an article that Orzel did NOT like apparently. — tom
In non-technical terminology, what does a 'macroscopically definite state' consist of? — Wayfarer
So, for the umpteenth time, 'many worlds' means 'many worlds'? Yes or no? — Wayfarer
Well, glad we got to the bottom of that, although it directly contradicts and answer you gave just above it. — Wayfarer
Well, glad we got to the bottom of that, although it directly contradicts and answer you gave just above it. — Wayfarer
The old argument from consensus. — tom
If we were to survey physicists, what percetage do you think would say that they buy MWI instrumentally versus buying it as making a realist ontological commitment? — Terrapin Station
The old argument from consensus. — tom
...then you buy MWI instrumentally.If you are a shut-up-and-calculate instrumentalist [with respect to MWI]... — SophistiCat
The many worlds interpretation exists to preserve determinism.
Many experts hope this interpretation is true because it can be mathematically modeled.
If the universe is truly non-deterministic then that could mean there will never be a theory of everything that describes all of the universe's forces and natural laws. — m-theory
Ontological commmitment interpretations are the opposite, obviously. One takes the explanation or account to be literally picking out things in the world, just as they are. — Terrapin Station
I would have thought that the 'many paths' are not phenomena. They're inferences. But one cannot see 'the other paths', by definition - they're what's in the 'other worlds'. We only see one path - so that is the only 'phenomenon' being observed, the rest is inference. — Wayfarer
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