On 11/28/2019 2:36 AM, John Clark wrote:
On Wed, Nov 27, 2019 at 5:51 PM Bruce Kellett <bhkellet...@gmail.com
<mailto:bhkellet...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Our branch of the multiverse is electrically neutral and it
seems likely all of them are, so preserving conservation of
charge doesn't seem like much of a problem.
/> Consider firing an electron at a screen. There are a very large
number of sub-branches created -- one for every position that the
electron can land. There was only one negative charge originally
-- now there are a very large number. Where did the extra charges
come from?/
What extra charges? That electron existed in a electrically neutral
universe, if you multiply that by "a very large number" you've got
a very large number of electrically neutral universes and charge
conservation is preserved in each branch and of course in the entire
multiverse.
And you could apply the same reasoning to energy. Almost all ways of
assigning a total energy to the universe find it to be zero.
Brent
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