On Sunday, November 19, 2023 at 10:26:58 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:

There seems to be a conflation between the multiple worlds of Everett and 
the eternal inflation of a multiverse.

Brent


Max Tegmark thinks there is a high level multiverse of this form involving 
MWI. The problem is that we will never be able to know, and MWI is an 
interpretation that is auxiliary to QM and really not necessary. 

LC
 


On 11/19/2023 4:49 PM, Lawrence Crowell wrote:


The real problem is that anything involving the multiverse, say some 
quantum field signature from the earliest quantum cosmology, is stretched 
by inflation into a red-shifted spectrum beyond measurability. The 
multiverse is consistent with inflationary cosmology, which is supported by 
data, but information about the multiverse may never be detected. 

LC 

On Saturday, November 18, 2023 at 5:58:15 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:

*I read an article called The multiverse is unscientific nonsense 
<https://iai.tv/articles/the-multiverse-is-unscientific-nonsense-auid-2668> by 
Jacob 
Barandes, a lecturer in physics at Harvard University, and I wrote a letter 
to professor **Barandes commenting on it. He responded with a very polite 
letter saying he read it and appreciated what I said but didn't have time 
to comment further. This is the letter I sent: *
===========


*Hello Professor Barandes *

*I read your article The multiverse is unscientific nonsense with interest 
and I have a few comments:*

*Nobody is claiming that the existence of the multiverse is a 
proven fact, but I think the idea needs to be taken seriously because: *

*1) Unlike Bohr's Copenhagen interpretation, the Many Worlds theory is 
clear about what it's saying. *
*2) It is self consistent and conforms with all known experimental 
results. *
*3) It has no need to speculate about new physics as objective wave 
collapse theories like GRW do.*

*4) It doesn't have to explain what consciousness or a measurement is 
because they have nothing to do with it, all it needs is Schrodinger's 
equation.   * 


*I don't see how you can explain counterfactual quantum reasoning and such 
things as the Elitzur–Vaidman bomb tester without making use of many 
worlds. Hugh Everett would say that by having a bomb in a universe we are 
not in explode we can tell if a bomb that is in the branch of the 
multiverse that we are in is a dud or is a live fully functional bomb.  You 
say that many worlds needs to account for probability and that's true, but 
then you say many worlds demands that some worlds have “higher 
probabilities than others" but that is incorrect. According to many worlds 
there is one and only one universe for every quantum state that is not 
forbidden by the laws of physics. So when you flip a coin the universe 
splits many more times than twice because there are a vast number, perhaps 
an infinite number, of places where a coin could land, but you are not 
interested in exactly where the coin lands, you're only interested if it 
lands heads or tails. And we've known for centuries how to obtain a useful 
probability between any two points on the continuous bell curve even though 
the continuous curve is made up of an unaccountably infinite number of 
points, all we need to do is perform a simple integration to figure out 
which part of the bell curve we're most likely on. *

*Yes, that's a lot of worlds, but you shouldn't object that the multiverse 
really couldn't be that big unless you are a stout defender of the idea 
that the universe must be finite, because even if many worlds turns out to 
be untrue the universe could still be infinite and an infinity plus an 
infinity is still the an infinity with the same Aleph number. Even if there 
is only one universe if it's infinite then a finite distance away there 
must be a doppelgänger of you because, although there are a huge number of 
quantum states your body could be in, that number is not infinite, but the 
universe is. * 


*And Occam's razor is about an economy of assumptions not an economy of 
results.  As for the "Tower of assumptions" many worlds is supposed to be 
based on, the only assumption that many worlds makes is that Schrodinger's 
equation means what it says, and it says nothing about the wave function 
collapsing. I would maintain that many worlds is bare-bones no-nonsense 
quantum mechanics with none of the silly bells and whistles that other 
theories stick on that do nothing but get rid of those  pesky other worlds 
that keep cropping up that they personally dislike for some reason. And 
since Everett's time other worlds do seem to keep popping up and in 
completely unrelated fields, such as string theory and inflationary 
cosmology. * 


*You also ask what a “rational observer” is and how they ought to behave, 
and place bets on future events, given their self-locating uncertainty. I 
agree with David Hume who said that "ought" cannot be derived from "is", 
but "ought" can be derived from "want". So if an observer is a gambler that 
WANTS to make money but is irrational then he is absolutely guaranteed to 
lose all his money if he plays long enough, while a rational observer who 
knows how to make use of continuous probabilities is guaranteed to make 
money, or at least break even. Physicists WANT their ideas to be clear, 
have predictive power, and to conform with reality as described by 
experiment; therefore I think they OUGHT to embrace the many world's idea. 
  * 


*And yes there is a version of you and me that flips a coin 1 million times 
and see heads every single time even though the coin is 100% fair, however 
it is extremely unlikely that we will find ourselves that far out on the 
bell curve, so I would be willing to bet a large sum of money that I will 
not see 1 million heads in a row.  You also say that "the Dirac-von Neumann 
axioms don’t support oft-heard statements that an atom can be in two places 
at once, or that a cat can be alive and dead at the same time", but there 
are only two possibilities, either there is an alive cat and a dead cat in 
two different places or there is a live/dead cat that instantly snaps into 
being either alive or dead by the act of "measurement" even though the 
standard textbook Copenhagen interpretation can't say exactly what a 
measurement is, or even approximately what it is for that matter. In many 
worlds a measurement is simply any change in a quantum system, it makes no 
difference if that quantum system is a human being or an unconscious brick 
wall. So in that sense many worlds is totalitarian because everything that 
is not forbidden by the laws of Quantum Physics and General Relativity must 
exist.   *

*You correctly point out that nobody has ever "seen an atom in two places 
at once, let alone a cat being both alive and dead", but nobody has ever 
seen infinite dimensional operators in Hilbert space that the Dirac-von 
Neumann axioms use either, all they've seen is ink on paper in mathematical 
books. And you can't get milk from the word "cow". *





*I'll close by just saying although I believe there is considerable 
evidence in favor of the many worlds view I admit it falls far short of a 
proof, maybe tomorrow somebody will come up with a better idea but right 
now many worlds is the least bad quantum interpretation around. And 
speculation is not a dirty word, without it science would be moribund, 
Richard Feynman said science is imagination in a tight straight jacket and 
I agree with him.  Best wishes John K Clark*
*=========*
John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis 
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>
lis


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