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kovrik | 6 years ago

I was always wondering about MWI and couldn't find the answer to one question. AFAIK Everett never mentioned Many Worlds in his paper. What he was talking about was a Universal Wave Function. In that sense, 'world' is just a 'quantum system', not 'Universe'. At what stage we started calling it Many Worlds?

When scientists say Many Worlds, do they actually mean Worlds as physical 'parallel universes' that pop up into existence?

Or they only mean that those are probable outcomes of our measurement (probable histories) that never actually happened (only one of them happened - the one we end up being it)?

discuss

order

gpsx|6 years ago

The words "many worlds" is misleading to a lot of people. As Carroll says, when a "measurement" occurs, nothing special happens. It is just normal quantum mechanics.

I think in general people accept that there can be a wave function for a cat with the states alive and dead. Cats are much more complicated than that. Presumably they have memory and inside that memory can be things like perhaps the result of a electron spin meansurement experiment. One state of the wavefunction of the cat might have the memory that the electron result was spin up. Another state of the cat might have the memory that the electron result was spin down.

This scenario above is a cat watching a electron spin measurement. Afterwards, the electron does not collapse into a single state upon being observed. Instead, it is still in two states but it is correlated with the memory of the cat (or entangled with the cat).

The belief, at least as I see it and I assume others believe this too, is that the cat has a conscienceness for each state of the wave function. So there is a "conscienceness" or "cat" that thinks the electron was measured as spin up. And then there is another that thinks that electron was measured as spin down. This is where the term many worlds comes from, the fact that there are two "consciences" (well, many consciences). I can see why people would think that part is weird. But how else should it work?

I guess it all comes down to what is the experience of a person (or cat) having a wave function and being in multiple state at the same time (just like all other objects in quantum mechanics). We are not external observers to the world, we are a part of it and we have a wave function too. Or, it would be more correct to say we are a part of the wave function of the system. There is not a separate wave function for each thing. There is just one wave function.

millstone|6 years ago

In MWI, all Worlds are physically real and may interfere with each other.

sliken|6 years ago

Sounds like that would be a testable hypothesis, right?

How exactly would they interfere?