Many Worlds Interpretation and act of measuring

In summary: ThanksBillThe image is of a cat in a box, which is an example of the 'measurement problem.' We can't make a measurement without influencing what we measure, and that's why there's only a 50% chance of the cat being alive. After the experiment is finished (box is opened), then the measurement has been made and we can say for certain what happened.
  • #456
Quantumental said:
CLAIMING that something unprovable that directly disagrees with observation IS TRUE is indeed the definition of 'borderline religious'

No, it isn't. It has nothing to do with religion. Your posts are way out of line.
 
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  • #457
stevendaryl said:
No, it isn't. It has nothing to do with religion. Your posts are way out of line.

Enough derailing. We'll agree to disagree. Thanks
 
  • #458
Quantumental said:
CLAIMING that something unprovable that directly disagrees with observation IS TRUE is indeed the definition of 'borderline religious'

Your description of what he was doing is false and insulting, and your claim about the definition of "religious" is false.
 
  • #459
Quantumental said:
Enough derailing. We'll agree to disagree. Thanks

No, it's not about "agreeing to disagree". It's about violating the rules of Physics Forums. Your posts are not in keeping with the principles of civility.
 
  • #460
Derek Potter said:
So far there is pretty much no agreement amongst even supporters of MWI in terms of how to solve preferred basis problem and Born Rule problem. Yougot no solution either. You sounds borderline religious with this dogmatic "WE ARE"

Well its generally accepted decoherence solves the preferred basis problem as standard textbooks like the following explain:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/3540357734/?tag=pfamazon01-20

There is debate if the decision theory argument does prove the Born Rule. Now if you believe it doesn't can you explain why a rational agent would choose one that is basis dependant which is the only way Born would not be true? You would need to violate the non-contextuality theorem on page 475 of Wallaces text.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #461
stevendaryl said:
No, it's not about "agreeing to disagree". It's about violating the rules of Physics Forums. Your posts are not in keeping with the principles of civility.

Again I disagree. I did not attack him in any shape, way or form. He did on the other hand by categorizing everyone that disagrees with him as silly.
I also told you that we should just agree to being in disagreement and not derail the thread. For some reason this was impossible for you. Please stop spamming your disagreement. That is against the rules of PF.

ALL I said was that his claims of truth without any evidence was 'borderline religious' which I stand firmly by 100%. He is claiming that something that disagrees with observation IS true without any evidence or solutions to the problems with that view. Additionally he decided to insult everyone else by calling any alternative view silly.
I also really doubt he needs you to step in and act like his big brother.
 
  • #462
bhobba said:
Well its generally accepted decoherence solves the preferred basis problem as standard textbooks like the following explain:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/3540357734/?tag=pfamazon01-20

You keep saying that it is generally accepted, but I am the only one that has posted more than 1 source that vehemetly disagrees with that.
Also, decoherence itself is dependent on a solution to the Born Rule issue.
 
  • #463
RUTA said:
What would superposition look like in Wheeler-deWitt? Each Hilbert space vector would represent a single spacetime manifold, metric and stress-energy tensor with no "meta" time dependence, i.e., the vector would not change or evolve.

If you're a psi-epistemist, then you might view MW as simply supplying the time-evolved 3D embedded view of a subset of all flat spacetime solutions in Wheeler-deWitt. In that sense, MW actually fits nicely with quantum gravity.

I'm sure MWers have considered this, so I was hoping someone here might explain it :-)

That's an interesting observation. What it suggests to me is that maybe for the universe as a whole, there is a sort of "preferred basis" in which the large-scale geometry of the universe is in some definite configuration. In the same way that decoherence effectively transforms a superposition of alternatives into a mixed state (or ensemble) of alternatives, it seems plausible that the possible alternatives for the large-scale structure of the universe would effectively be an ensemble of noninteracting possibilities.
 
  • #464
Quantumental said:
You keep saying that it is generally accepted, but I am the only one that has posted more than 1 source that vehemetly disagrees with that.

As I have mentioned to you finding some dissenting papers on an issue does not make what they say true. Now if you actually have an objection then you should be able to give a précis of it - not links to papers - but the actual argument in your own words. So far all I see is the factorisation issue - which is an issue - but not everyone agrees its a fatal one. The reason being, for example as I suggested, QM may have some kind of natural process such as vacuum fluctuations that defines an external environment.

Quantumental said:
Also, decoherence itself is dependent on a solution to the Born Rule issue.

Your reason for saying that is? Not a link, but your actual reason. I have posted that Wallace, in chapter 3, explains how decohorence is defined without reference to the Born Rule. Its the same as Consistent Histories - its defined in terms of the concept of history. Again it is wise before criticising something you should try to understand it.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #465
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