On 15 Nov 2017, at 22:26, Bruce Kellett wrote:

On 16/11/2017 1:55 am, Bruno Marchal wrote:
On 15 Nov 2017, at 00:55, Bruce Kellett wrote:
On 15/11/2017 12:47 am, Stathis Papaioannou wrote:
On Mon, 13 Nov 2017 at 8:54 am, Bruce Kellett <[email protected] > wrote:

I don't think you have fully understood the scenario I have outlined. There is no collapse, many worlds is assumed throughout. Alice splits according to her measurement result. Both copies of Alice go to meet Bob, carrying the other particle of the original pair. Since they both
have now met Bob, the split that Alice occasioned has now spread to
entangle Bob as well as the rest of her environment. So there are now two worlds, each of which has a copy of Bob, and an Alice, who has a particular result. Locality says that Bob's particle is unchanged from
production, so when he measure its spin, he splits into two copies,
according to spin up or spin down. Since Alice is standing beside him,
she also becomes entangled with his result. But Alice already has a
definite result in each branch, so we now have four branches: with
results 'up-up', 'up-down', 'down-up', and 'down-down'. However, only the 'up-down' and 'down-up' branches conserve angular momentum. How do
you rule out the other branches?

When you put something in the cupboard and come back later to get it, why, under MWI, is it still there?

I don't understand the significance of your question. Why wouldn't things remain stable in MWI? After all, the whole world, as it is, becomes entangled with the particular branching event.

OK, but not instantaneously. This might be the point where we disagree in the interpretation of the Non-collapse theory.

I think that the general idea is that the entanglement with the result spreads at the velocity of light -- inside the forward light cone. This spread of entanglement does not require that all objects in the forward light cone have explicitly interacted with the original event. The mathematics are quite clear on this point.

You are right. So you might need an experience like Mandel & Co(I will look at the reference, I guess you see which experience I allude to) where two distant lasers create a singlet state non locally. That one has made me doubt that MW could avoid Action-at-a-distance, and some thought experience by Lucien Hardy too, but eventually, I remain unconvinced, because wherever are the actors, the singlet state never describes a non-local affair, it only predicts the result of the people who will met at some time.

Bruno


Bruce

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