On Tuesday, June 5, 2018 at 3:05:40 AM UTC, Bruce wrote:
>
> From: <agrays...@gmail.com <javascript:>>
>
>
> On Tuesday, June 5, 2018 at 1:18:29 AM UTC, Bruce wrote: 
>>
>> From: <agrays...@gmail.com>
>>
>>
>> Remember that the analysis I have given above is schematic, representing 
>> the general progression of unitary evolution. It is not specific to any 
>> particular case, or any particular number of possible outcomes for the 
>> experiment.
>>
>> Bruce
>>
>> *OK. For economy we can write,  ** (|+>|e+> + |->|e->),  where e stands 
>> for the entire universe other than the particle whose spin is being 
>> measured. What is the status of the interference between the terms in this 
>> superposition? For a quantum superposition to make sense, there must be 
>> interference between the terms in the sum. At least that's my understanding 
>> of the quantum principle of superposition. But the universe excluding the 
>> particle being measured seems to have no definable wave length; hence, I 
>> don't see that this superposition makes any sense in how superposition is 
>> applied. Would appreciate your input on this issue. TIA, AG*
>>
>>
>> A superposition is just a sum of vectors in Hilbert space. If these 
>> vectors are orthogonal there is no interference between them. Your quest 
>> for a wavelength in every superposition is the wrong way to look at things. 
>> Macroscopic objects have vanishingly small deBroglie wavelengths, but the 
>> can still be represented as vectors in a HIlbert space, so can still form 
>> superpositions. I think you are looking for absolute classicality in 
>> quantum phenomena -- that is impossible, by definition.
>>
>> Bruce
>>
>
> *If that's the case, why all the fuss about Schrodinger's cat? AG*
>
>
> Is there a fuss about Schrödinger's cat? Whatever fuss there is, is not 
> about the possibility of a superposition of live and dead cats. It is about 
> choosing the correct basis in which to describe the physical situation. The 
> Schrödinger equation does not specify a basis, and that is its main 
> drawback. In fact, that observation alone is sufficient to sink the naive 
> many-worlds enthusiast -- he doesn't know in which basis the multiplication 
> of worlds occurs.
>
> Bruce
>

*Interesting point. Do you mean that if one solved the SE for some standard 
quantum problem (nothing fancy, no decoherence modeled), one can generally 
expand the solution in different bases, say p, E, or x, and each expansion 
would imply a different set of worlds using the MWI?  Are there other bases 
besides these three? I'm thinking there could be an infinite set of basis 
vectors since, by analogy, IIUC, for the simple 2-dimensional vector space 
of "little pointy things", I think every pair of non co-linear vectors 
could form a basis (so most bases are not orthogonal). AG*

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