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I am now completely convinced that attempts to
witness low probability events or to travel to low measure sectors of the
plenitude are doomed to failure.
The (hidden) assumption behind quantum suicide is
that of continuity of consciousness: If there is only one unlikely outcome that
will preserve one's consciousness, then that is what will happen as observed by
the person himself.
But why should this be true? Even if the
probability were exactly zero for the person's consciousness to be preserved,
the person will always find himself alive somewhere in the plenitude. And
therefore he will always experience his consciousness to be
continuous.
As I see it, the plenitude contains a set of states
a particular observer can be in. Each element has a certain a priory
probability, depending on the details of the structure of the
plenitude.
If we are dealing with immortal observers,
then this probability must be conserved. I.e. if an experiment has three
outcomes (a, b, c), the sum of the a priory probabilities of the observer
observing event a, b, and c, must equal the a priory probability of the
observer being in the state before performing the experiment.
In case of a mortal observer, however, the
probability is not conserved (from the observer's perspective). This is nothing
but the definition of being mortal.
I claim that one might just as well consider all
states the observer could possibly be in as independent, the particular state he
is in drawn randomly from the a priory probability distribution. It really
doesn't matter. Consciousness will stil be experienced as continiuous from the
perspective of the observer. We don't have to put this in by hand. There is no
such thing as a conservation of consciousness. There is a conservation of
probability from the third person's perspective, which doesn't always translate
into a conservation of probability from the first person's
perspective.
The suicide machine thus can't work. The
probability of winning the lottery, given that you have just boarded the suicide
machine, is simply the a priory probability of experiencing the desired outcome
divided by the a priory probability of just having boarded the suicide machine.
The probability of winning is thus unaffected.
Saibal
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- Re: Why (quantum) suicide doesn't work Saibal Mitra
- Re: Why (quantum) suicide doesn't work Russell Standish

