Quantum mechanics is only an approximate description of the
Mathematical Multiverse. The only things that are real are the elements
of that Multiverse, which are algorithms (some of them describe people
in some computational state).
While the details have yet to be worked out (I have been working on
this along a completely different approach compared to Bruno, less
rigorous but more likely to yield some real physics), I can see rough
outlines of how you get quantum field theory out of this.
Saibal
Citeren Samiya Illias <[email protected]>:
Neils Bohr is famously quoted as saying: 'Everything we call real is made
of things that cannot be regarded asreal. If quantum mechanics hasn't
profoundly shocked you, you haven't understood it yet."
What's your take on this?
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