If not, could our search for what we think of as the "soul" be somehow related to a connection between dimensions. — Steve Leard
So a death in this plane of existence would be analogous to removing a grain of sand from a mountain of sand? Theoretically speaking of course. — Steve Leard
If that theory could be established as a fact what would it say about our concept of reality, in particular our viewpoints on death. For example, if other dimensions are spun up off of events which occur here does that mean that when i die here i am deceased on all planes. — Steve Leard
If not, could our search for what we think of as the "soul" be somehow related to a connection between dimensions. — Steve Leard
I heard that in one world, Wigner's Friend adopted Schrodinger's Cat, and they lived happily ever after. That'd be the world I'd choose, although I probably won't have the chance. — Wayfarer
↪Steve Leard Have a read of The Multiverse Idea is Rotting Culture — Wayfarer
I hold that all interpretations of QM are just crutches that are better or worse at helping you along to the Zen realization that QM is what it is and doesn’t need an interpretation. As Sidney Coleman famously argued, what needs reinterpretation is not QM itself, but all our pre-quantum philosophical baggage—the baggage that leads us to demand, for example, that a wavefunction |ψ⟩ either be “real” like a stubbed toe or else “unreal” like a dream.
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You shouldn’t confuse the Zen Anti-Interpretation with “Shut Up And Calculate.” The latter phrase, mistakenly attributed to Feynman but really due to David Mermin, is something one might say at the beginning of the path, when one is as a baby. I’m talking here only about the endpoint of the path, which one can approach but never reach—the endpoint where you intuitively understand exactly what a Many-Worlder, Copenhagenist, or Bohmian would say about any given issue, and also how they’d respond to each other, and how they’d respond to the responses, etc. but after years of study and effort you’ve returned to the situation of the baby, who just sees the thing for what it is. — The Zen Anti-Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics - Scott Aaronson
↪Andrew M I like this, and it reminds me of my own take on many things. In philosophy of time I'm sort of both a presentist and an eternalist, in different senses. On ontology more generally I stand by both the positions that all there is nothing to reality but empirically observable stuff and that all of reality is itself an abstract mathematical object. And yeah, regarding quantum mechanical observations, I can see a Copenhagen interpretation or an Everett interpretation as equally valid, depending on perspective. In all of these issues I've listed here, the main difference is between a first-person perspective and a third-person perspective on the same thing. — Pfhorrest
I've heard the Sanskrit term "advaita" (nondualism) and am often tempted to use it to describe this type of thinking — Pfhorrest
I always like this one:
What did you do to the cat, Erwin, It looks half dead.
— Mrs Schrodinger — Wayfarer
If not, could our search for what we think of as the "soul" be somehow related to a connection between dimensions. — Steve Leard
Couldn't agree more. The multiverse is obscenely anti-ockhamist, it assumes a awful lot and for no good reason. — Olivier5
Everett’s scientific journey began one night in 1954, he recounted two decades later, “after a slosh or two of sherry.” He and his Princeton classmate Charles Misner and a visitor named Aage Petersen (then an assistant to Niels Bohr) were thinking up “ridiculous things about the implications of quantum mechanics.” During this session Everett had the basic idea behind the many-worlds theory, and in the weeks that followed he began developing it into a dissertation. 1
many flying unicorns — Olivier5
If we come across one flying unicorn (that we can confirm definitely is a flying unicorn — Pfhorrest
You see, in the multiverse, everything that can happen does happen, — Olivier5
you (and probably others, I haven't read the entire thread) are confusing the multiverse with the many-worlds interpretation. They're two entirely separate things. — fishfry
there are things that might not happen even in the multiverse
Okay so, are you going to tell us the difference between the many-worlds and the multiverse, or are you going to keep it for yourself? — Olivier5
I never said otherwise. I said "in the multiverse, everything that can happen does happen". — Olivier5
Okay, the many-worlds interpretation. Multiverse is another sci-fi scenario, fair enough. — Olivier5
The Schrödinger equation ? — Olivier5
You already agreed that multiverse theory is sci-fi, yet you claim to be able to make predictions about it. How do you square those two things? — fishfry
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