- #1
bland
- 148
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- TL;DR Summary
- I don't know how to (TL;DNR) this summary but I'm wondering basically if my reasoning is flawed to conclude that Many Worlds, appears to imply they happen on both sides of the creation event, otherwise known as the BB.
I'm at this point because a whole bunch of audio books I've been indulging in all seem to be converging on Many Worlds, and this has been given extra authority now because Sean Carroll appears to be a convert. I used to wonder if this was actual physics or metaphysics, and I've given up asking that question.
However... if I accept from reputable physicists that Many Worlds is indeed true, and if I am completely agnostic about whether it's 'testable' my current understanding appears to be that it must imply a genuine infinity of many worlds, for a similar reason that there are an infinite amount of real numbers between any two real numbers and there are an infinite amount of real numbers. I understand that there are different sizes of infinities but even then my reasoning says (if I have understood many worlds correctly) that every quantum event splits the universe.
And there must be countless trillions but perhaps a finite number of trillions of splittings going on at any instant. And every single one of them will be a split universe. My confusion about the multiverse (taking it to be the same as many worlds which some people do) is that some camps seem to qualify whether many worlds is infinite or just really big. But the biggest really big that I've come across so far is the number 10 to the power of 500. And while this is certainly enormously big, it's not even close to infinity.
The question that I want to get an answer to relies on there actually being and infinity of infinites, and not just a qualified infinity or a very big number. So I think it's fair to assume bearing in mind that each moment trillions upon trillions of many worlds are going on and that number is increasing exponentially, at least.
Where I'm going with this is it occurred to me that the further back we go in time as we near the creation event itself we come to a point where there aren't yet enough quantum events going on to be infinite. I know that the BB was not the creation event itself, because it had already begun otherwise there'd be nothing to bang. Long story short it appears to me that if there is an infinite number of infinities of many worlds that it must go back through the BB, which I suppose means that our universe is a quantum foam of various size multiverses, and I have just discovered that some physicists see these multiverses as the same thing as many worlds. Which I find confusing because I thought that the multiverse was a big number not an infinite number.
What is bothering me me most is all the above speculation sounds like someone in the 1970's just smoked some strong weed and spaced out, as it were. But we're in 2020, and on one hand we have respected physicists like Carroll, imploring us to accept that an infinite?! quantity of ourselves, providing that the laws of physics are not broken, is actually a real thing, and not metaphysical bs.
If I had one wish it would be to live in a time way off in the future when someone does to quantum physics what Einstein did to classical physics. i.e. that quantum physics is still used and is useful, but it is subsumed into some other theory where many worlds just disappears as the laughable naivety of the 21st Century.
I feel really let down by Sean Carroll as he seems too serious to write him off. Does anyone else feels that the lay public is being taken for a ride by some physicists who are sounding more like Professor Stoners? The only thing that tethers me to reality these days is the comfort that a cloud of hydrogen, has condensed into I and the world I live in which I accept to be true, and that in itself is so preposterous that I can't really dismiss anything.
I'm really feeling like 'shutTF up and calculate' is more to my liking. In other words, I'd much rather good explainers like Carroll would just concentrate on writing better physics books for the lay person than flying off into these confuddling grotesque abominations, and then expect me to take it seriously because 'it's just what the wave function says', as if that's some kind of a justification.
I suppose this post is going to go straight into the forum trash can, which I don't really think is warranted. I'll check back in a few days. I pine for the intellects of John Bell and Dick Feynman. If anyone can understand this, I'd really appreciate some serious grounding rather than mere repetition of more metaphysics.
Are any physicists here thinking to themselves that we might have to accept that we'll never understand the measurement problem, or do they have hope that we'll get there one day without the madness that we seem to be willingly heading towards.
However... if I accept from reputable physicists that Many Worlds is indeed true, and if I am completely agnostic about whether it's 'testable' my current understanding appears to be that it must imply a genuine infinity of many worlds, for a similar reason that there are an infinite amount of real numbers between any two real numbers and there are an infinite amount of real numbers. I understand that there are different sizes of infinities but even then my reasoning says (if I have understood many worlds correctly) that every quantum event splits the universe.
And there must be countless trillions but perhaps a finite number of trillions of splittings going on at any instant. And every single one of them will be a split universe. My confusion about the multiverse (taking it to be the same as many worlds which some people do) is that some camps seem to qualify whether many worlds is infinite or just really big. But the biggest really big that I've come across so far is the number 10 to the power of 500. And while this is certainly enormously big, it's not even close to infinity.
The question that I want to get an answer to relies on there actually being and infinity of infinites, and not just a qualified infinity or a very big number. So I think it's fair to assume bearing in mind that each moment trillions upon trillions of many worlds are going on and that number is increasing exponentially, at least.
Where I'm going with this is it occurred to me that the further back we go in time as we near the creation event itself we come to a point where there aren't yet enough quantum events going on to be infinite. I know that the BB was not the creation event itself, because it had already begun otherwise there'd be nothing to bang. Long story short it appears to me that if there is an infinite number of infinities of many worlds that it must go back through the BB, which I suppose means that our universe is a quantum foam of various size multiverses, and I have just discovered that some physicists see these multiverses as the same thing as many worlds. Which I find confusing because I thought that the multiverse was a big number not an infinite number.
What is bothering me me most is all the above speculation sounds like someone in the 1970's just smoked some strong weed and spaced out, as it were. But we're in 2020, and on one hand we have respected physicists like Carroll, imploring us to accept that an infinite?! quantity of ourselves, providing that the laws of physics are not broken, is actually a real thing, and not metaphysical bs.
If I had one wish it would be to live in a time way off in the future when someone does to quantum physics what Einstein did to classical physics. i.e. that quantum physics is still used and is useful, but it is subsumed into some other theory where many worlds just disappears as the laughable naivety of the 21st Century.
I feel really let down by Sean Carroll as he seems too serious to write him off. Does anyone else feels that the lay public is being taken for a ride by some physicists who are sounding more like Professor Stoners? The only thing that tethers me to reality these days is the comfort that a cloud of hydrogen, has condensed into I and the world I live in which I accept to be true, and that in itself is so preposterous that I can't really dismiss anything.
I'm really feeling like 'shutTF up and calculate' is more to my liking. In other words, I'd much rather good explainers like Carroll would just concentrate on writing better physics books for the lay person than flying off into these confuddling grotesque abominations, and then expect me to take it seriously because 'it's just what the wave function says', as if that's some kind of a justification.
I suppose this post is going to go straight into the forum trash can, which I don't really think is warranted. I'll check back in a few days. I pine for the intellects of John Bell and Dick Feynman. If anyone can understand this, I'd really appreciate some serious grounding rather than mere repetition of more metaphysics.
Are any physicists here thinking to themselves that we might have to accept that we'll never understand the measurement problem, or do they have hope that we'll get there one day without the madness that we seem to be willingly heading towards.