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
What MWI says is that you, the observer, are a quantum system just like the quantum coin. From an isolated observer's viewpoint (see Wigner's Friend), you become entangled with the quantum coin when you measure it — Andrew M
Thought experiments mean very little, especially when poorly thought through.
E.g. what Schrödinger forgot in his famous mind experiment is that the cat is just as valid an observer as his master. — Olivier5
A cat, or a human being for that matter, is not just an observer. She is also a biological system. Nobody has ever solved the Schrödinger equation for biological systems, it's far too complicated. We can barely compute it for simple molecules, like water. If you want to apply QM to life, you got a lot of very very hard "shut up and calculate" to do. — Olivier5
In essence, it appears certain photons were simultaneously hitting and missing photosynthetic molecules within the bacteria—a hallmark of entanglement. “Our models show that this phenomenon being recorded is a signature of entanglement between light and certain degrees of freedom inside the bacteria,” [Marletto] says. — 'Schrödinger's Bacterium' Could Be a Quantum Biology Milestone
How come Schrödinger did not see that his cat was just as good an observer as he was, pray tell? — Olivier5
Actually Schrödinger's cat was an attempt to prove that observers cannot be the cause of anything quantic happening. — Olivier5
The line is my consciousness at the latest, because I experience only one world. — SolarWind
Can you clarify? — Andrew M
The Schrödinger cat thought experiment was conceived in order to refute the Copenhagen interpretation, specifically the idea that the act of "observation" or "measurement" reduces or "collapses" the wavefunction. I am sympathetic to the attempt, I don't believe in the magic of observation either. But to me, it seems Schrödinger forgot a tiny little detail, which is that his cat was an observer too and therefore (according to said Copenhagen interpretation) could collapse the wavefunction inside his box, all by himself. — Olivier5
It is typical of these cases that an indeterminacy originally restricted to the atomic domain becomes transformed into macroscopic indeterminacy, which can then be resolved by direct observation. That prevents us from so naively accepting as valid a "blurred model" for representing reality. In itself it would not embody anything unclear or contradictory. There is a difference between a shaky or out-of-focus photograph and a snapshot of clouds and fog banks. — The Present Situation in Quantum Mechanics - Erwin Schrödinger, 1935
Now, fluorescence is considered a quantic phenomenon, so this finding above that chlorophyll can "entangle" with photons doesn't seem so new to me. — Olivier5
OK, but the basic point of Schrodinger's thought experiment was that if it doesn't make sense to imagine macroscopic phenomena being indeterminate, then it shouldn't make sense to imagine atomic phenomena being indeterminate either. — Andrew M
"Latest" I wrote. But the truth is a combination of Bohmian Mechanics and the Schrödinger–Newton equation causing the collaps. It depends in the mass of the measuring apparatus. The cat is heavy enough.
— SolarWind
Fair enough. Is that different to the Penrose interpretation? — Andrew M
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