Hi Krim
I suspect we live in a reality where the wave function
does collapse with or without observation, which is why
we find the past is fixed and cannot be reoccupied by us.
That's my experience at least. So this email is now fixed
for ever. Feel free to prove me wrong.
David M
[Krimel]
I would add that probability also diminishes as one moves backwards into
the
"past". Our memories and recordings of the past give us the illusion of
fixity. But they are replications of settled probabilities. If one were
actually able to move backwards in time, one would confront to same
quantum
uncertainties and problems of entropy (in reverse) that we encounter
moving
forward it time.
It is the illusion of memory that makes the past seem fixed and confuses
folks like Ham who see space/time as static.
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