Why is this one real as opposed to the others I'm not experiencing where I instead went to sleep instead of replying to your post, now? — Question
what puzzles me about this interpretation of QM is how is this reality (the one here, at this moment which you are reading here on Earth) real as opposed to other possible worlds? — Question
Many-worlds implies that all possible alternate histories and futures are real, each representing an actual "world" (or "universe").
1. Introduction
The idea that quantum theory is a true description of physical reality led Everett (1957) and many subsequent investigators (e.g. DeWitt and Graham 1973, Deutsch 1985, 1997) to explain quantum-mechanical phenomena in terms of the simultaneous existence of parallel universes or histories.
Note the scare quotes around world and universe. So are they 'worlds' - or worlds? Are they real - or 'real'?
I don't think we will ever know. — Wayfarer
The question I am asking is, if 'parallel universes or histories is the solution, what is the problem?' Why is it necessary to postulate such an apparently bizarre notion in the first place? What problem is it trying to solve? — Wayfarer
The question I am asking is, if 'parallel universes or histories is the solution, what is the problem?' Why is it necessary to postulate such an apparently bizarre notion in the first place? What problem is it trying to solve? — Wayfarer
So, taking QM seriously as a theory of reality solves many problems, and renders it testable. Parallel "worlds" are a prediction. — tom
Charles Sanders Peirce's careful distinction of existence from reality might be helpful here. "Real" means that something possesses properties sufficient to identify it, regardless of whether anyone ever attributes them to it, while "exists" means that something reacts with other things. Hence all possible worlds are real, but only our actual world exists. — aletheist
Um, perhaps you've not been paying attention, but we know the other worlds exist because they interact with each other and with our world. — tom
I may be uneducated on the matter; but, why is this timeline where I'm asking these questions apparent to me and not any other? — Question
but when the initial decision is made to entertain the notion of many worlds, then a whole series of consequences flow on from that. But I'm sceptical of the very first assumption. Actually, I'm not just sceptical - I'm dismissive of it. I think it is a fantasy. Everett himself says he had been drinking when the idea came to him. 'Hey, what if all the outcomes are real?' — Wayfarer
Many Worlds is the only interpretation of QM that exists. — tom
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.