Do worlds of MWI ontologically have to exist?

In summary, the MWI asserts that all possible outcomes occur simultaneously, which solves the collapse problem. However, the MWI does not explain why different observers usually agree on the alternative seen."
  • #36
Carsten Milkau said:
The basic model of randomness doesn't say anything about particular outcomes, only about "a tendency for many repetitions" and you cannot repeat the universe.

Oh yes it does - its called the Kolmogrov axioms and the strong law of large numbers that follows from those axioms:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_large_numbers

You can't say anything about a single observation, other than the possible outcomes you can get - but in a large ensemble of systems prepared exactly the same way (technically the same state) the same observation performed on them all will yield results as per the strong law of large numbers.,

And yes that you cannot observe the universe is an issue with interpretations of QM.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #37
bhobba said:
You can't say anything about a single observation, other than the possible outcomes you can get - but in a large ensemble of systems prepared exactly the same way (technically the same state) the same observation performed on them all will yield results as per the strong law of large numbers.

I wouldn't say "will yield results..." I would say "will probably yield results..." (with probability approaching 1).
 
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  • #38
stevendaryl said:
To me, it's basically Copenhagen bumped up a notch---rather than talking about single measurement outcome whose probability is given by the Born Rule, it shifts focus to an entire history whose probability is given by a more sophisticated version of the Born rule.

What it tries do do is as detailed at the start of the thesis I posted:
Its from 'Pioneering work by Griffiths, extended among others by Omnes, Gell-Mann and Hartle, has led to a new formulation of quantum mechanics in which no observer or quantum-classical divide is required and wave function collapse does not occur. This interpretation is known as ‘consistent histories’.

It is supposed to fix the issue in Copenhagen of what is a measurement - everything is quantum from the start - no collapse - just a quantum state. A book explaining it at the intermediate level has kindly been made available by Griffiths:
http://quantum.phys.cmu.edu/CQT/index.html

I read it about 10 years ago now, liked it but it seemed a bit too contrived so didn't go deep into it. That's the thing about all these interpretations - you can't really know the deep detail of them all, only a general outline. I did study the Emergent Multiverse in its entirety and its a bit more advanced, and interestingly actually similar in many ways to Decoherent Histories

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #39
DarMM said:
In addition, one should look to more recent work, like the Pusey-Leifer theorem concerning operational time symmetry, which show Many Worlds would have to be fine tuned to avoid disagreeing with QM.
Just wondering to which result this is referring?
https://arxiv.org/abs/1607.07871 "Is a time symmetric interpretation of quantum theory possible without retrocausality?" maybe?

I think in that result they say it doesn't apply to Everett (MWI) or Bohm (although I may be misreading it, or we're talking about different things here...it gets confusing to me). If that is the paper you're referring to I may just need to study it more.
 
  • #40
bhobba said:
What it tries do do is as detailed at the start of the thesis I posted:
Its from 'Pioneering work by Griffiths, extended among others by Omnes, Gell-Mann and Hartle, has led to a new formulation of quantum mechanics in which no observer or quantum-classical divide is required and wave function collapse does not occur.

I don't think it actually accomplishes that, though.
 
  • #41
eloheim said:
Just wondering to which result this is referring?
https://arxiv.org/abs/1607.07871 "Is a time symmetric interpretation of quantum theory possible without retrocausality?" maybe?

I think in that result they say it doesn't apply to Everett (MWI) or Bohm (although I may be misreading it, or we're talking about different things here...it gets confusing to me). If that is the paper you're referring to I may just need to study it more.
So a symmetry can show up in three ways in a theory let's say.
  1. Ontologically, that is it really is a genuine fundamental symmetry of the theory
  2. Dynamically, where the symmetry is not naturally present but becomes effectively true because of some effect of evolution over time. An example might be where some liquid freezes into a crystal. The fundamental molecular laws don't have lattice displacement symmetries, but the crystals do.
  3. Fine-tuning, where the initial conditions are chosen so that the symmetry looks like it is true, but they aren't. An example would be a pencil being perfectly set up to balance on its tip. This situation is perfectly circularly symmetric, but the laws and the pencil itself are not by default. The "tuning" part refers to how the symmetry would be destroyed by the slightest perturbation of the situation
So there is a symmetry in QM called Operational Time Symmetry. What they prove in that paper is that if you don't have retrocausal or acausal theories, then Operational Time Symmetry can't be Ontological, i.e. can't be a fundamental symmetry. Now this is an observed symmetry in experiments, so you do have to explain it. By dropping Retrocausality then, you only have recourse to showing it arises dynamically or via fine-tuning.

If you choose dynamically you really have to prove this occurs and you would be letting in the fact that before the relevant dynamical process took place (e.g. the freezing of the liquid above) the symmetry would not be present. Since it is a symmetry of QM, this would mean Many-Worlds would disagree with standard QM at some point in the early history of the universe and hence cosmological observations could disprove it.

Choosing fine-tuning arguments is considered artificial, as basically the multiverse in MWI would have to have started off in precisely the correct state to make it look as though Operational Time Symmetry was a fundamental symmetry, when it isn't.

They discuss Bohmian Mechanics and Many-Worlds in the last section of the paper.
 
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  • #42
Is a superposition itself ontologically consisting of multiple realities? Or is a superposition occurring in one and the same reality? (And is the separation into worlds the result of decoherence then?)
 
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  • #43
DarMM said:
I've seen the phrase "more real" used, so it would agree with how some see it.

What is the difference between real, more real, very real, and really real?

Cheers
 
  • #44
cosmik debris said:
What is the difference between real, more real, very real, and really real?

Cheers
I honestly don't know what is meant by the phrase, I could never make sense of it, which is why I mentioned the world volume explanation of the coefficients, as that makes more sense to me.
 
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  • #45
DarMM said:
I honestly don't know what is meant by the phrase, I could never make sense of it, which is why I mentioned the world volume explanation of the coefficients, as that makes more sense to me.

The term reality should be used very sparingly and in very obvious ways in physics. Even then you rub into issues best discussed, not here, but in philosophy. As I have posted before it used to bore Richard Feynman so much during a class he took on it at MIT he purchased a little drill and spent his time in class drilling little holes in his shoes he was so bored. He had to write an essay on consciousness. In typical Feynman style he did experiments on himself while falling to sleep and wrote up his experiences. No discussion of what consciousnesses was - just some observations on it in regard to dreaming and being semi awake. We now know about various brain states etc like alpha state and certain practices like Tai Chi promote being in such a state. That's how Tai CHi masters do these unbelievable things eg:


They are in alpha state where you react quicker.

But what is consciousnesses? Who knows - we can do experiments, training etc - but ultimately who knows. Science is strange like that. You start out wanting to answer all these deep questions, but its a chimera - you end up answering something else that is interesting - but does not answer things like consciousness, reality etc.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #46
DarMM said:
They discuss Bohmian Mechanics and Many-Worlds in the last section of the paper.
Thanks for the detailed reply, and, of course, you're right about their conclusion in the paper. I was a little confused because they were saying they deal with those two theories at the end. Honestly I still find some of the arguments in that paper hard to follow, not with the math but just with all of the definitions they put forth and how those concepts are used to prove their points. But, anyway, that's another thread for another day, so I'll just leave it at that! :wink:
 
  • #47
A. Neumaier said:
But it [MWI] does not explain why each observer sees only one alternative, and why different observers usually agree on the alternative seen.
MWI does explain why each observer sees only one outcome, and why all observers agree on all outcomes; this was the whole point of Everett's thesis. Each observer gets split by the outcome event, with each observer, in their own world, seeing just one of the outcomes. It is not an assumption but the consequence of the dynamics of quantum theory. Strictly undergraduate stuff - nothing advanced. And all observers, within each world, agree on their observations for the same reason.
 
  • #49
Michael Price said:
this was the whole point of Everett's thesis. Each observer gets split by the outcome event, with each observer, in their own world, seeing just one of the outcomes. It is not an assumption but the consequence of the dynamics of quantum theory.
No.

I had studied Everett's thesis. It contains nothing dynamical except for the dynamics of the wave function. All branches are there all the time; just their contents changes. When does a split happen, given only the Schrödinger equation? The Schrödinger equation does not distinguish between times with events and times without events - it does not even have a concept of event. These questions are swept under the carpet.

A proper logical definition would say what an observer is in terms of the deterministic time-dependent wave function (since there is nothing else), and what the stochastic dynamics of each observer's observables is, again in terms of the deterministic wave function. It would specify what it means that some part of the universe (an observer) observes another part of the universe (the observed).
 
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  • #50
If you send a photon through a beamsplitter, it becomes in superposition of traveling several paths at once. Nevertheless there still is only one photon traveling those paths. So if we measure the photon, we detect it in one place and only once.

So I was wondering if the superposition of worlds leads to such a situation: the measurement is the detection of a quantum, so that it appears only once; in one of the worlds. The other worlds get probability 0 of detecting it.

So in that sense collapse is a result of quantization?

It seems strange to me that the quantum that gets measured suddenly multiplies itself to be able to be detected in ALL worlds!
 

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