On Friday, March 6, 2020 at 1:22:30 PM UTC-7, Philip Thrift wrote:
>
>
> Sean Carroll
> @seanmcarroll
> ·
> What really happens to Schrödinger’s cat is that it becomes entangled with 
> its environment, so that the wave function comes to describe multiple 
> almost-classical worlds! Happens to all of us, and nicely explained in this 
> @veritasium video.
>
> https://twitter.com/seanmcarroll/status/1235999175428333568
>
> @philipthrift
>

I've  asked this before and might have gotten some replies, but I can't 
recall what they were. Many of the quantum paradoxes arise due to a 
particular interpretation of superposition, namely, that all alternatives 
happen simultaneously (before measurement). Why can't superposition be 
interpreted to mean that each alternative has a probability of occurrence 
and nothing more? TIA, AG 

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