are you going to change the philosophy? Are you going to stick with the straightforward way of reading a scientific theory as just telling us what the world is like — Interview with David Wallace
"This may be true if the probability is 0.5 vs 0.5. What if we wait shorter for the radioactive element to decay and the ratio is 0.58 (living cat) vs 0.42 (dead cat)? How many SA2 and SB2 are there then?"
— SolarWind
Still two, or many. It depends on how you resolve the fact that the BR appears to work in MWI, and that's something I'm not sure how to do... possibly that's a good reason not to buy into it, or maybe it's just something beyond my scope. — InPitzotl
You have a source? — Olivier5
You're still counting the wrong thing. Believing that France exists is not making 67 million assumptions. Also, if those worlds are a problem with MWI, you should have a problem with them in QM.It does assume an infinity of worlds. — Olivier5
Something is majorly broken with this argument. If your wavefunction has A+B in it, and you have applied a force to a mass in A, does A then move twice as fast? Assuming it did, if we entertain collapse into A, did we lose mass to B going away?Interestingly, the conservation of mass and energy would seem gigumongously violated by this constant burgeoning of a gigumongous number of new universes. — Olivier5
That does not follow.The MWI supporters claim the world divides when the states are decohered. But decoherence is an exponentially decreasing process that is theoretically never complete. Therefore already the basic assumption is wrong and the MWI can be thrown into the garbage can. — SolarWind
"The MWI supporters claim the world divides when the states are decohered. But decoherence is an exponentially decreasing process that is theoretically never complete. Therefore already the basic assumption is wrong and the MWI can be thrown into the garbage can."
— SolarWind
That does not follow. — InPitzotl
Everything you have after "Therefore" does not follow from what you have before "Therefore".What does not follow from what? — SolarWind
MWI isn't proposing that anything different happens with wavefunctions than that they evolve in accordance with Schrodinger's Equation. — InPitzotl
It does, but you're attacking a straw man. A "world" is not an entire decohered universe.Oh sorry. I actually thought "many worlds" had something to do with many worlds. — SolarWind
That's correct, but that division is an entanglement.And in every book about MWI it says that they divide at a measurement.
I think the difference between infinite and gigumongous is rather technical.
He's saying it's either infinite or a very large finite number.
— Olivier5
Interestingly, the conservation of mass and energy would seem gigumongously violated by this constant burgeoning of a gigumongous number of new universes. — Olivier5
So even though there are more and more branches as time evolves, the contribution of each branch to the total energy is weighted by the factors |a_n|^2, and those numbers go down over time as branches split. The effects precisely cancel, so that the total energy of the universe (all branches included) is constant. It’s just that individual branches get “thinner” over time (their amplitudes get smaller), so they make smaller and smaller contributions to the total.
are you going to change the philosophy? Are you going to stick with the straightforward way of reading a scientific theory as just telling us what the world is like
— Interview with David Wallace
In the classic physics era, massive objects were supposed to attract one another at a distance, without any physical chanel of interaction between them, as by magic. Even Newton thought this was a problem, that the world could not possibly be that way, with actions at a distance. And yet the likes of Wallace were for two centuries quite happy to see Newtonian gravity as "the way the world was like"...
A scientific theory makes predictions about how the world behaves in quantitative terms. It doesn't tell you "what it's like" ontologically or qualitatively, never did, never will. — Olivier5
Answering “yes” to the second question basically commits you to overturning a really pretty solid consensus in philosophy of science that scientific theories really do have to be understood as making claims about what the world is like, and aren’t just shorthands for claims about how experimental devices work. (And it’s a consensus that I think pretty much all scientists share when they’re not actively philosophising. Are there really astrophysicists who think that the reason for talking about stars is to model patterns of detections on photoplates, not vice versa?) — Interview with David Wallace
I don't think superposition of states is a good way to think about QM. — Olivier5
Interestingly, the conservation of mass and energy would seem gigumongously violated by this constant burgeoning of a gigumongous number of new universes. — Olivier5
That would be an instrumentalist view of science, but Wallace takes a realist view, i.e., that a theory represents the structure of the world. — Andrew M
Newton thought that the "action at a distance" aspect of his gravitational law was a problem because he was also a realist.
Superposition is a fundamental principle of quantum mechanics, regardless of interpretation. — Andrew M
Why the average and not the sum? What is the argument here? — Olivier5
Superposition is a fundamental principle of quantum mechanics, regardless of interpretation.
— Andrew M
No, it's not. — Olivier5
The discussion in the preceding section about the limit to the gentleness with which observations can be made and the consequent indeterminacy in the results of those observations does not provide any quantitative basis for the building up of quantum mechanics. For this purpose a new set of accurate laws of nature is required. One of the most fundamental and most drastic of these is the Principle of Superposition of States. We shall lead up to a general formulation of this principle through a consideration of some special cases, taking first the example provided by the polarization of light. — The Principles of Quantum Mechanics, Ch.1: The Principle Of Superposition, p4 - Paul Dirac
how would you describe the double-slit experiment without assuming superposition? — Andrew M
I would assume that the photon behaves as a wave until it interacts with something, at which point somehow it behaves as a particle. — Olivier5
What Dirac is talking about is the superpositions of wavefunctions. Waves can add to one another, as in sound1 + sound2 = sound3. — Olivier5
how would you describe the double-slit experiment without assuming superposition?
— Andrew M
I would assume that the photon behaves as a wave until it interacts with something, at which point somehow it behaves as a particle. — Olivier5
the photon still interacts with the apparatus at the slits
— Andrew M
Not the photons passing the slits. — Olivier5
So to emphasize, MWI doesn't add the assumption of multiple worlds; the assumption leading to multiple worlds is already there. The traditional interpretation has a world with a dead cat and a living cat in it; those are worlds. MWI instead removes the assumption that some collapses are ontic whereas others are just apparent. — InPitzotl
A "world" is not an entire decohered universe.
Nothing is being added to the equation here; no partitions that aren't there already... — InPitzotl
Total energy=1/2E+1/2E=E — Andrew M
So at every branching, the total energy of the universe is divided by 2? And likewise with its mass, I suppose. Since there is a gigamongous number of branching per nanosecond, it follows that if the MWI was true, our universe would become empty of all matter and energy quite rapidly, like in a few seconds. — Olivier5
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