
Originally Posted by
Cioran
An isolated system is in superposition.
The universe is an isolated system (there is nothing outside it)
Therefore, the universe is in superposition and evolves deterministically according to the Schrodinger wave equation. Therefore, we get many worlds. In getting the many worlds, we get rid of all the weirdness of quantum mechanics: indeterminism, spooky action at a distance and the inexplicable wave function collapse.
Experimentally, objects as large as Buckyballs and molecules with as many as 240 atoms, according to my latest knowledge, have been placed in superposition in the two-slit experiment. Everything is in superposition all the time, if MW is true, so in theory we could send a superposed person through the two slits, but in practice this could not be done.
One of the things I am having trouble with is the way MWI treats the word "superposition". Deutsch seemed to clarify this for me with the following from chapter 2 of The Fabric of Reality, pages 44-45:
I shall now start calling the interfering entities 'photons'. That is what they are, though for the moment it does appear that photons come in two sorts, which I shall temporarily call "tangible" photons and "shadow" photons. Tangible photons are the ones we can see, or detect with instruments, whereas the shadow photons are intangible (invisible) -- detectable only indirectly through their interference effects on the tangible photons. (Later, we shall see that there is no intrinsic difference between tangible and shadow photons: each photon is tangible in one universe and intangible in all the other parallel universes -- but I anticipate.)
What this means to me is that superposition is not at the level of the states that a single particle could have, but is a way to represent the superposition of worlds. In the MWI view each particle can be in only one state.
There is a problem with associating a probability with each particle's state. I think you attempted to resolve that by increasing the number of worlds so there are 30 worlds to represent 30%. That seems very arbitrary. The probability value could have an arbitrarily large number of decimal points. So you would need infinitely many worlds just to represent that number accurately--for each item you measured!
Without accuracy the determinism falls apart. Of course, in practice, we can use approximations, but MWI is claiming that reality is deterministic, so those infinitely many worlds for each measurement would have to exist for their position to be correct.
I am amazed to what extent people will go to keep determinism. It isn't worth keeping.