Newtonian physics.
Schrodinger's Cat demonstrated uncertainty. The uncertainty no longer exists. There is no need to look to see whether the cat is alive or dead; it is alive in one universe and dead in another.Our looking changes how we interact with other quantum entities; even if we assume that there is a dead-cat world and alive-cat world before we look, we don't know what world we're in until we look, so we "experience" the cat as "alive and dead." This is the same thing with particles. When we're not measuring them, they display the quality of existing in all possible states at once. Once we look, they behave like ordinary matter, one thing or another, not everything simultaneously. In Schrodinger's Cat, the cat is like a particle until we look. This is because we ourselves, as quantum entities, become entangled with other quantum entities. So while our observation is not a "cause" of anything (it doesn't affect the cat), it very much affects how we experience the cat. So, while MW has an answer to what's happening with Schrodinger's Cat, I wouldn't say it "eliminates the problem" (if it even ever was a problem, since it was merely meant to illustrate our observations of particle behavior on a macro level).



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