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A Mathematical Answer To the Parallel Universe Question

diewlasing writes to mention that Oxford scientists have proffered a mathematical answer to the parallel universe question that is gaining some support in the scientific community. "According to quantum mechanics, unobserved particles are described by 'wave functions' representing a set of multiple 'probable' states. When an observer makes a measurement, the particle then settles down into one of these multiple options. The Oxford team, led by Dr. David Deutsch, showed mathematically that the bush-like branching structure created by the universe splitting into parallel versions of itself can explain the probabilistic nature of quantum outcomes."

566 comments

  1. Yes... by fyngyrz · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...but this is only a valid answer in some parallel universe.

    Yeah, yeah, I know it only affects physical outcomes. Laugh anyway. It's Monday.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:Yes... by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 4, Funny

      In some parallel universe you simply posted a link to goatse.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    2. Re:Yes... by Selfbain · · Score: 4, Funny

      And got a +5 insightful.

      --
      Well, it has never been successfully tested.
    3. Re:Yes... by gardyloo · · Score: 1

      ...but this is only a valid answer in some parallel universe.

      Yeah, yeah, I know it only affects physical outcomes. Laugh anyway. It's Monday. I guess Mondays are a physical invariant across all universes.
    4. Re:Yes... by fyngyrz · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...but in that universe, goatse is a picture of a cat going "LOL I'm all up in Schrodinger's box. I can have tuna?"

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    5. Re:Yes... by MyLongNickName · · Score: 4, Funny

      And yet, no matter how many parallel universes there are, he still never gets laid. Where's the justice?

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    6. Re:Yes... by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Laugh anyway. It's Monday.

      Not in MY universe.

    7. Re:Yes... by pegr · · Score: 4, Funny

      ...but this is only a valid answer in some parallel universe.
       
      I have no idea. I didn't want to change the outcome of the article by reading it...

    8. Re:Yes... by Walt+Dismal · · Score: 1

      In many universes, THIS is first post. In some universes doomed to explode very, very soon, this is NOT first post. In some universes doomed to explode right now, Darl McBride is Emperor.

    9. Re:Yes... by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 1

      There's no justice. Funniest thing I've read today.

      --
      No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    10. Re:Yes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Laugh anyway. It's Monday.

      "It must be Thursday," Aurthur said. "I never could get the hang of Thursdays."

      And I don't do Monday very well. Of course, Aurthur was wrong - he was having an incredibly GOOD day compared to everybody else on the planet (except Patricia, who was having a damned good time and didn't know WTF was happening at home).

      If it were me, it would happen on Monday and the damned gizmo my friend brought wouldn't work... but at least I'd be full of beer.

      Now in the other universe I get laid five times a day. Wake me up when somebody finds a way for me to trade places with the me in the other universe...

      -mcgrew

    11. Re:Yes... by Poltras · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm gonna start my OWN universe. With hookers and blackjack!

    12. Re:Yes... by madsenj37 · · Score: 2, Funny

      On second thought, forget the blackjack. /I love Bender.

      --
      Choosing the lesser of two evils is a choice for evil.
    13. Re:Yes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your cat-speak is whacked.

      "Quantum cat is in Schrodinger's box. I can has tuna?"

    14. Re:Yes... by Dachannien · · Score: 5, Funny

      Or maybe this. (Assuming the deep link works.)

    15. Re:Yes... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Eww, robosexual sicko!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    16. Re:Yes... by PMBjornerud · · Score: 1

      Ugh?

      lolcat is: "IM IN UR xxx, yyyING UR zzz"

      At least get it right when youære correcting people.

      --
      I lost my sig.
    17. Re:Yes... by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      I just peed myself laughing. That is one of the funniest things I have ever seen in my life.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    18. Re:Yes... by bvheide · · Score: 1

      You know, in my experience, there really is no justice in any universe with regard to getting laid... ...frankly, I think it's time women started to value bird legs and beer guts.

    19. Re:Yes... by QuickFox · · Score: 1

      At least get it right when youære correcting people. Look who's talking.
      --
      Terrorists can't threaten a country's freedom and democracy. Only lawmakers and voters can do that.
    20. Re:Yes... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 2, Funny

      Right here in this universe of course.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    21. Re:Yes... by porcupine8 · · Score: 1

      Dude, that's old meme. Get with the times.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    22. Re:Yes... by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Awesome, truly awesome. Mods, wake up! Follow the link!

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    23. Re:Yes... by renegadesx · · Score: 1

      Go do your research before spewing your garbage, and last time I checked Genesis 1 made no mention of alternate realitys (in favour of or against) so I dont see what your being so bitchy about

      --
      Make SELinux enforcing again!
    24. Re:Yes... by scribblej · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ever check the HTTP headers on a request to the Slashdot webserver?

      There's always a different, random Futurama quote in an X-Fry: or X-Bender: header.

      Example:

      $ curl -I slashdot.org
      HTTP/1.1 200 OK
      Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2007 05:41:42 GMT
      Server: Apache/1.3.37 (Unix) mod_perl/1.29
      SLASH_LOG_DATA: shtml
      X-Powered-By: Slash 2.005000175
      X-Bender: They're tormenting me with uptempo singing and dancing!
      Cache-Control: private
      Pragma: private
      Vary: User-Agent,Accept-Encoding
      Connection: close
      Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1

    25. Re:Yes... by zobier · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ever check the HTTP headers on a request to the Slashdot webserver?

      There's always a different, random Futurama quote in an X-Fry: or X-Bender: header. (Bender|Fry|Leela)
      --
      Me lost me cookie at the disco.
    26. Re:Yes... by laejoh · · Score: 0

      A parallel univers simulated in Excel 2007 perhaps?

    27. Re:Yes... by WgT2 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they are merely observing the nature of time -> the past being a sort of parallel universe that has split off from this current universe to which we can, now, never travel to.

      That's what I was going to post and then I saw what you wrote:

      Yeah, yeah, I know it only affects physical outcomes.
      Which plays directly into mass=time=space -> which equates time with the physical.

      P.S. Feel free to punch any holes into what I've posted.

    28. Re:Yes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which also then extrapolated means all my -5 posts are really Positive, while all of yours are only 5 inches long oops +/-5, mostly Negative, because obviously the Universe has turned around and is now falling back into a single particle as we have also proved many times. askinventor

    29. Re:Yes... by Lemmeoutada+Collecti · · Score: 1

      I would punch those holes, but were I to do that I would deprive my quantum alternate of that pleasure. I'm not quite sure, but I don't think I'm the evil twin, so for now I'll just settle for a good maniacal laugh while I tug my goatee.

      --

      You can have it fast, accurate, or pretty. Pick any 2.
    30. Re:Yes... by Corwn+of+Amber · · Score: 1

      Maybe the alternate reality where God creates Man and Woman, then creates the First Woman from a rib?

      Fuckin'moron.

      --
      Making laws based on opinions that stem up from false informations leads to witch hunts.
    31. Re:Yes... by WgT2 · · Score: 1

      Wow. You must be the 'angry' twin then; who 'tugs' at their goatee and laughs!? Stroking: yes. Tugging: no.

    32. Re:Yes... by Corwn+of+Amber · · Score: 1

      You meant to say "there is only one reality".

      Yes, there is only one reality. TFS mentions "According to quantum mechanics, unobserved particles are described by 'wave functions' representing a set of multiple 'probable' states."

      Well, if you try to predict "where" a wave is as if it was a particle, then yes, you only get "a set of multiple 'probable' states". When you subsequently try to predict the state of the wave using THAT set,... WTF is the point?

      "When an observer makes a measurement, the particle then settles down into one of these multiple options."

      Well, DUH. If you measure what you could have measured in the first place, using a theory that predicts "the state will more probably be around here than there, but you must measure to make sure", then you have a theory that can't be disproven, except by exhaustive testing. And the abra-cad-abra spooky string action at a distance can go the way of the pink unicorns too.

      "The Oxford team, led by Dr. David Deutsch, showed mathematically that the bush-like branching structure created by the universe splitting into parallel versions of itself can explain the probabilistic nature of quantum outcomes."

      What kind of drugs DO they use? "If we consider that all mathematical possibilities defined by our theory do somehow physically exist, then we can explain that we can't know the future state of the universe non-probabilistically." Whew, only typing that remembers me how I feel on mushrooms... and makes as much sense as I do in that state.

      Seems like they believe their mathematical models somehow do exist? Well, take an xy graph and go draw an imaginary number on it: can't exist(*). Parallel universes: can't exist.

      *: "There is a way that makes it can", I know. I'm talking of representing something that is an abstraction defined externally to that universe. "Not in the namespace". "Not in the domain". In that same sense, parallel universes that "exist" as abstract mathematical representations of non-existant things do not exist. "Not in the namespace of physical reality". "Defined in the domain of that which does not exist".

      --
      Making laws based on opinions that stem up from false informations leads to witch hunts.
    33. Re:Yes... by Bearhouse · · Score: 1

      Try tinyurl.com

      http://tinyurl.com/2qvmpk

      Or, 'safe' preview

      http://preview.tinyurl.com/2qvmpk

      Also good for (very) dumb firewall restricions...

    34. Re:Yes... by Paracelcus · · Score: 1

      Bird legs, beer guts and asses like the insides of spoons, in short, me.
      But in my favorite alternate universe, I'm built like a Greek God am perpetually 30 years old and am surrounded by supermodel(esq) fantasy women, who fawn over me day and night.

      Foo + bar = random outcome X uncertainty or (a sixpack a hooker and a motel)

      Put the saddle on the stove maw, I'm ridin' the range tonight!

      --
      I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
  2. Why is this news? by Valdrax · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's just the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, and I don't see anything in the article that's a shocking new revelation about it. The article's just a rehash of an idea that's been around since the 50s.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    1. Re:Why is this news? by ShatteredArm · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, the article seemed to be a little lacking in the "mathematical proof" area.

    2. Re:Why is this news? by Kristoph · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, I am not a physicist, perhaps you are ...

        Commenting in New Scientist magazine, Dr Andy Albrecht, a physicist at the University of California at Davis, said: "This work will go down as one of the most important developments in the history of science."

      I would image something that is 'one of the most important developments in the history of science' might qualify as news. Don't you think? Even if proven not to be 'one of the most important' it certainly qualifies for recognition based on that possibility, IMHO.

      ]{

    3. Re:Why is this news? by MontyApollo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem is that the brief news story was more focused on explaining what the Many Worlds hypothesis is to a lay audience and not really pointing out what the new breakthrough is really all about to a geek audience. Someone needs to link to science site and not a general news site.

    4. Re:Why is this news? by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 4, Funny

      The moon landing was "one of the most important developments in human history", but that doesn't mean you should report it as news on slashdot forty years later!

    5. Re:Why is this news? by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      On top of that, the article is a terrible representation of quantum mechanics. It's about time people stopped referring to superposed states as if they were somehow less real than pure states. (And, of course, all the examples are fanciful macroscopic many-worlds ideas.)

      But no, it doesn't provide much in the way of actual information, does it?

    6. Re:Why is this news? by ZombieWomble · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As described in this article, the factor they claim to have "proved" does indeed make no sense - I was under the impression that the many worlds theory was defined so that this branching tree structure could describe the probabilistic nature, such that this result is a direct consequence of the theory. But I must admit, I'm more of a practical physicist, the minutiae of the underlying explanations for quantum mechanical processes don't really affect me much - is there any kindly passing mathematician who can explain what might be interesting about this result?

    7. Re:Why is this news? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Besides being "a physicist at the University of California at Davis", who is Dr Andy Albrecht? and why should I think that he is any more likely than Jack Thompson to recognize one of the most important developments in the history of science? If we are talking Nobel Prize in Physics (or some other prestigious award in the field of physics) winner, maybe there is reason to believe that he is right, otherwise he is just "some dude from California who knows enough to understand the math".

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    8. Re:Why is this news? by OriginalArlen · · Score: 1
      No, (from the summary anyway) there's a big difference. MWI is just a description; Deutsch seems to have *derived* MWI from the wave function. Which would be a big deal, I think.

      At any rate, Deutsch must be good - he's one of the handful of theorists I've heard of, along with Witten, Green, Turok, Hawking, er... a couple of others, it's on the tip of my tongue,.. oh, YOU know, whatsisname,...

      --

      Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
    9. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It's not just a statement of the many worlds interpretation. It's a claim of mathematical proof that the branching proposed by the many worlds theory gives rise to the wave equations as the branches are superposed. So it's equivalent to the "and only if" portion of an "if and only if" condition in mathematics. So in effect they've stated that "a universe that branches when quantum events are observed gives rise to the wave equations that define the undetermined state of quantum events in our universe." This means that the many worlds interpretation may just have graduated from hypothesis to theory.

    10. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, you have moments of intelligence but you are usually derisive, abrasive, and boorish, so I am cutting you out of my slashdot.

    11. Re:Why is this news? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Well, it would be interesting what the result actually was!

      What would indeed be interesting would be a proof of the actual probabilities: That's the one piece still missing in the MWI. Of course you can postulate them, just as the Copenhagen interpretation does. But that's not really satisfying.

      In short: By construction, you can explain that for a measurement the world will "split up" into two worlds (actually it's not a physical split-up, but more of a logical one; the universe doesn't double, it's just a change of the branch you see). However there's to my knowledge not yet a satisfactory explanation of why we observe them with exactly the probabilities we do (e.g. why do we find ourselves four times as often in "branch A" than in "branch B" if the coefficient of "branch A" was twice as large in our previous branch?)

      Unfortunately the article doesn't provide a link to the actual work (or at least some more scientific source about it), so it's hard to say what it actually is about.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    12. Re:Why is this news? by CheshireCatCO · · Score: 3, Informative

      Always hesitate to take people's word for the significance of a piece of work. This is especially true of their own work, naturally, but even friends and colleagues often mis-judge or lack perspective on the importance of a discovery. Furthermore, reporters often misquote or pull quotes from context to the point where they'd be considered falsification if this were a scientific paper. I've even been quoted by a reporter who made the entire quote up from whole cloth. (Seriously, I'd never said anything remotely like what was quoted. Fortunately, it wasn't really a bad quote and I wasn't too bothered, except by the principle.) Thus, when someone says something as hyperbolic-sounding as the quote there, I immediately suspect it.

      I *am* a physicist, although I don't have Dr. Albrecht's credentials in this area, so he certainly has a more informed opinion than my own. However, based on my knowledge of the subject, the importance of this finding is in fact fairly over-rated. I don't think that it confirms anything unexpected *and* the theory is, as far as I know, not falsifiable. (I've never heard of a test which would differentiate between the Many Worlds view and the competing interpretations.) So you see, showing that you can't rule Many Worlds out is important, but it does strike me as really revolutionary.

    13. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone needs to link to science site and not a general news site.

      OK, but it costs money.

    14. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah and Jack Thompson must be a good lawyer, he's one of the handful of lawyers I've heard of.....

      I'm familiar with Deutsch because his name always seems pop up in fantastic claims, mainly to do with parallel universes, such as in 2004 or 2003.

      I'm always a bit dubious of the theory myself and I'm not sure whats new here. In fact I'm not even sure it is scientific theory as it doesnt appear to be falsifiable.

    15. Re:Why is this news? by SimonInOz · · Score: 1

      No no, you don't understand.

      It's not REALLY news unless we observe it.

      --
      "Cats like plain crisps"
    16. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Many Worlds Interpretation is not just an interpretation, it is a (slightly) different theory:

      In conventional interpretations, the wave function "collapses" upon observation, to a single eigenfunction.

      In the Many Worlds Theory, it NEVER collapses. The magnifying effect of an observation of microscopic fluctuations into macroscopic changes in the world (i.e., a geiger counter clicking or a track in a cloud-chamber) causes the universe to split into distinct branches corresponding to eigenfunctions. These distinct branches continue to interact with each other (although extremely weakly, because they are "far apart" in Hilbert space).

      This should be falsifiable, although the technology to do so might not exist now. One must repeatedly perform an extremely accurate measurement whose macroscopic effects are minimal (so the different branches do not drift too far apart). "Extremely accurate"=accurate enough to observe the interaction of the other branches of the universe. I believe Dr. Deutsch has proposed such an experiment that may be conducted within the next 50 years.

    17. Re:Why is this news? by Hydrophobia · · Score: 1

      The problem is just because you can mathematically simulate how it COULD be, does not mean you have any actual proof that it IS that way. Sigh.... the media sucks at science, even the people who are supposed to cover it specifically. Seriously, what's with the quote of THIS DISCOVERY WILL GO DOWN IN HISTORY YAYAYAYAYAYAYAYYAYAYAYA! Get f'in real.

    18. Re:Why is this news? by SilentTristero · · Score: 1

      I think a demonstration of large-scale quantum computation could falsify competing interpretations. (If you believe that computation can only be carried out by physical processes anyway, something about Church & Turing :-)) If the computation's large enough, there wouldn't be enough matter/energy in the experimental apparatus to perform it in the given time.

      But this is not really the place to discuss it.

    19. Re:Why is this news? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      The moon landing was "one of the most important developments in human history", but that doesn't mean you should report it as news on slashdot forty years later!

      Unless you are trying to motivate people to turn in the lost Apollo 11 tapes.

    20. Re:Why is this news? by buswolley · · Score: 1

      http://www.physics.ucdavis.edu/Cosmology/albrecht/Myinfo/Research%20Publications.pdf Here are his credentials. Not shut up before you talk, and do some research.

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    21. Re:Why is this news? by StressedEd · · Score: 1

      who is Dr Andy Albrecht I think he's a Professor now, no that I would expect "New Scientist" to get a silly thing like "the details" right.

      why should I think that he is any more likely than Jack Thompson to recognize By looking at his research background and standing in the community.

      As an aside he was a lecturer here at Imperial for some time (Cosmology course), sadly he was tempted back over the pond.

      --
      Be nice to people on the way up. You will meet them again on your way down!
    22. Re:Why is this news? by StressedEd · · Score: 1
      ..blast, I didn't finish...

      That said, your cynicism and scepticism, while a little presumptuous, is entirely healthy. Too many people accept things at face value!

      --
      Be nice to people on the way up. You will meet them again on your way down!
    23. Re:Why is this news? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      http://www.physics.ucdavis.edu/Cosmology/albrecht/Myinfo/Research%20Publications.pdf Here are his credentials. Not shut up before you talk, and do some research. So, he's published a bunch of papers, so have a lot of other physicists. What indicates that other scientists consider his views of what is important as normative? As I said before, has he received some prestigious award? Is he a member of some organization or board that demonstrates that other physicists hold him in high regard? Is there any evidence that he is held in high regard by other physicists?
      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    24. Re:Why is this news? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      I understand that you hold him in high regard based on your personal experience of him. That is all well and good, but without some indication of why he should be held in high regard quoting his opinion as meaning something is just an appeal to "ecclesiastical authority". You say that you think he is a Professor, well so was Ward Churchill (who is a complete crackpot) until earlier this year. You tell me to look at his research background, someone else posted a list of at least some of his papers, doesn't tell me a thing. You say look at his standing in the community....THAT'S WHAT I'M ASKING, what is his standing in the community, what evidence is there that he has standing in the community of physicists?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    25. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How was your GRE?

    26. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If some of the branches eventually converge but do not overlap, perhaps we should be able to observe a sort of tunneling between them, a "Quantum Mechanical Karma", if I am allowed a joke...

      In observations that would manifest as slight violation of independence of random occurrences of same event, like near misses slightly raising probability of a subsequent hit.

      Bye, bye to Poisson distribution?

    27. Re:Why is this news? by StressedEd · · Score: 1
      Did you read the addendum to my post?

      ..blast, I didn't finish... That said, your cynicism and scepticism, while a little presumptuous, is entirely healthy. Too many people accept things at face value!

      ". You say that you think he is a Professor, well so was Ward Churchill (who is a complete crackpot) until earlier this year. What evidence do you have to support your assertion that he's a complete crackpot? Why his standing in the community of course. In the case of this guy that "standing" is rather minimal.

      You say that you think he is a Professor Merely to point out that if the reporter can't get a basic detail like that correct they should not be relied upon to convey subtle and complex science in an accurate manner.

      ...least some of his papers, doesn't tell me a thing.

      ...what evidence is there that he has standing in the community of physicists That seems somewhat circular. To publish in journals such as PRL, you need to convince a group of your peers of the novelty of your work. If you manage to do this consistently over a length of time you gain reputation and their respect. In the end it's all like a web of trust. There is no "authority" to whom you can turn for an ultimate judgment, merely your peers and collective reputations (such as journals) that have been built up over many decades or centuries.

      That doesn't make these people infallible of course but it does mean that their opinion of something they have been studying for ~20 years carries more weight than that of some random idiot - or journalist.

      --
      Be nice to people on the way up. You will meet them again on your way down!
    28. Re:Why is this news? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      BTW, I was replying to a post that said that Albrecht's claim that this was an important discovery should indicate that the topic was newsworthy. My reply was intended to inform that poster that such a comment didn't tell anyone (outside of the limited group familiar with who Albrecht was) anything. I am not a physicist. This is not a site for physicists (although they are welcome). Expecting me, as a random slashdot reader, to recognize what the top journals of physics are is ridiculous. The original poster should have given some credentials as to why Albrecht's opinion of this topic was significant. The poster who gave a link to a list of his papers assumed that I should have researched who Albrecht was by searching through the publications to see what he published. That poster should have said something along the lines of "He has published numerous papers in ..., a prestigious peer reviewed physics journal." That would at least have told me something. I do not know what the prestigious physics publications are, so knowing what he published told me nothing. Why should I think more of his opinion than that of Peter Meszaros? Who I chose at random from the physics faculty of Pennsylvania State University.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    29. Re:Why is this news? by buswolley · · Score: 1

      Not as good as in my practice exams. 630 V 710 Q ..my practive tests were more like 710 V 790 Q

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    30. Re:Why is this news? by Polir · · Score: 1

      I am not a physicist, but I read this pretty good FAQ http://www.hedweb.com/everett/everett.htm which explains a lot about the theory and at Q37 http://www.hedweb.com/everett/everett.htm#detect a solution is provided how to prove wheter the Many Worlds theory is true or not. It also predicts that around 2030-2040 we will have reversible naonelectronics and AI to perform the experiments.

    31. Re:Why is this news? by buswolley · · Score: 1
      He has published over 50 peer reviewed articles, invited to over 50 Major talks, He is a member over over 15 panels and review boards, and much more. Give it a rest.

      He's certainly not just some dude from California, as you suggested.

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    32. Re:Why is this news? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      And all I asked was that the person who quoted him as an indication that the story was newsworthy tell us why his opinion mattered.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    33. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although news about Sputnik might be relevant today.

    34. Re:Why is this news? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The moon landing was "one of the most important developments in human history", but that doesn't mean you should report it as news on slashdot forty years later!
      Huh? How the fuck did I miss that?
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    35. Re:Why is this news? by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      That's not true. Different "worlds" cannot interact with each other, due to the linearity of quantum mechanics. By design, there is no experiment in MWI which can detect the branching of the multiverse. That was the whole point of Everett's relative state formalism: to construct an interpretation which is identical to ordinary quantum mechanics (but which has, supposedly, a simpler conceptual framework).

    36. Re:Why is this news? by Threni · · Score: 1

      > I would image something that is 'one of the most important developments in the history of science' might qualify as news. Don't you think?

      Not if it's 50 years old.

    37. Re:Why is this news? by Corwn+of+Amber · · Score: 1

      (I hope you're the kind of slashdotter who reads replies to his comments, so that you answer to this one.)

      There are a lot of things that don't make sense in most interpretations of quantum mechanics. This is what I've read that does make some sense of it all. Does that interpretation not rule out the whole idea of MWI and spooky-action-at-a-distance? (I love that word. Does sum up most I've read on QM at all... sounds like so much medieval alchemy to me.)

      --
      Making laws based on opinions that stem up from false informations leads to witch hunts.
    38. Re:Why is this news? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      (I hope you're the kind of slashdotter who reads replies to his comments, so that you answer to this one.)

      I usually indeed do read replies, however there's still a chance that when I read it and want to answer that I don't have the time immediately, and then forget it. Well, obviously that's not the case with your comment :-)

      There are a lot of things that don't make sense in most interpretations of quantum mechanics. This is what I've read that does make some sense of it all. Does that interpretation not rule out the whole idea of MWI and spooky-action-at-a-distance? (I love that word. Does sum up most I've read on QM at all... sounds like so much medieval alchemy to me.)

      Well, I cannot find much meat in that interview (unfortunately it's also hard to extract that meat, because it's intermixed with his views on other topics like AI). It's hard to say anything definitive unless you see the actual interpretation. However there are some points which sound fishy to me: He seems to dismiss everything which goes against his view as "just the crude measurement experiments back then". Well, you may argue away statistical behaviour that way, but you simply cannot argue away the fact that there are indeed localized events. Also he stresses the lasers all the time. Now lasers are coherent light; that's the state which is the most classical-wave-like you can get. Indeed, in an ideal laser, the number of photons isn't even defined. Note that you need single-photon sources to do experiments like quantum teleportation; a conventional laser cannot do that.

      However some things he criticises on the Copenhagen interpretation are also not true for MWI. To begin with, in the MWI there are no classical particles at the fundamental level, nor is there any statistical behaviour. Particle-like and statistical behaviour only occur on the observational level.

      Of course that's all based on what I got out of that interview. I cannot exclude the possibility that my conclusions are completely wrong. But to tell, I'd have to see the real thing, not just an interview like the one you quoted.

      Oh, and BTW in the MWI there's no spooky action at a distance. In MWI, the "instant change of the distant particle" isn't any more mysterious than the "superluminar move of a star from light years on my left to light years on my right" when I turn around 180 degrees.
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    39. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the QM sense they cannot interact but they can interfere. The proposed interference may be testable in a manner that would distinguish between MWI and decoherence interpretations. Testability runs into conflicts with thermodynamic irreversibility, though, so MWI is probably falsifiable only in the sense that if QM is false then so is MWI.

  3. Publication? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The linked article doesn't indicate where this research has been published. Anyone know?

    1. Re:Publication? by ZombieWomble · · Score: 3, Insightful
      You honestly think they waited for this to be peer-reviewed and published before they belted out the press releases? That would mean they may be expected to provide some detail, which would be madness!

      Seriously though, there's no sign of a citation from any of the people running the story (most of which are nearly identical, so they're probably just copying from the same press release), and there's no sign of it on arXiv or from a quick trawl of journal feeds, so it's a very good chance that it's either unpublished work, or a conference paper somewhere. Not surprising, given how many "most significant discoveries in the history of science" turn out to be much less dramatic under the cold hard light of review than when they're first reported.

    2. Re:Publication? by scottripley · · Score: 1
    3. Re:Publication? by threat_or_menace · · Score: 1

      Compare the tone of the New Scientist writeup to the tone of the writeup on Breitbart.com, which has Drudge headline sidebars and doesn't cite where they started writing from. New Scientist is reporting what one of their physics guys thinks is fairly neat stuff from a meeting. The "most important in the history of science" quote is from someone not on the team (apparently) who works at Davis. He may have been having a drink when he said it, the poor guy. Breitbart breaks the quote into two parts and separates them by a few grafs, making it look like a looming consensus. I'm sorry the Breitbart piece was the one linked in, since the New Scientist piece (follow the google link above) is so good. I'm very glad that so many people With Clues are in this thread to discuss it.

  4. Obligatory ... by JeepFanatic · · Score: 5, Funny

    But can this explain why all the men have goatees?

    1. Re:Obligatory ... by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 3, Funny

      Better they have goatees than goatse.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    2. Re:Obligatory ... by Reverend528 · · Score: 1

      I'd like and explanation for the cowboy hats as well.

    3. Re:Obligatory ... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Or goatse with a goatee.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    4. Re:Obligatory ... by Cerberus7 · · Score: 1

      Far too many references to goatse in just 5 minutes. That tells you something about _this_ universe.

      --
      I don't know about you, but my servers run on the power of cotton candy and happy thoughts. -Anonymous Coward
    5. Re:Obligatory ... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      You mean, the truly fundamental particle of our universe is the goatseon?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    6. Re:Obligatory ... by Pollardito · · Score: 1

      can't they all just be pictured eating goat cheese and we're spared both alternatives?

  5. Is THIS the answer we're looking for? by Eberlin · · Score: 0, Redundant

    maybe, maybe not...or both!

  6. Yes, but can it answer the question... by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

    Does Spock have the beard in that parallel universe?

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:Yes, but can it answer the question... by knarfling · · Score: 1

      The question I want answered is about Worf and Deanna's kids. (You remember, of course, when Worf keeps skipping through the multiple universes?) Do the Betazoid/Klingon children have empathetic qualities? Or Do you have Klingons who KNOW when you are insulting their honor?

      --
      Great civilizations have lived and died on false theories. Don't mess up mine with a few facts.
  7. Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think about it.

  8. This is confusing by zappepcs · · Score: 1

    So does this mean that the dog really did eat my homework (in another universe) and thus I'm not really telling a lie?

    1. Re:This is confusing by GammaKitsune · · Score: 1

      Yes, but your instructor will only give you an "A" in another universe.

      --
      Gamertag: WyleType
    2. Re:This is confusing by smist08 · · Score: 1

      Or as Terry Pratchett postulates: There is an alternate universe out there somewhere where all those checks really are in the mail and the post office is very very busy.

  9. the answer? by CaptainPatent · · Score: 2, Funny

    It happens to be that the answer to life, the universe and everything in that universe is 43

    --
    Well, back to rejecting software patent applications.
    1. Re:the answer? by Notquitecajun · · Score: 1

      Possibly, but what is the question? And has it been discovered for that universe yet?

    2. Re:the answer? by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

      Oh they know the question. But because of that post, we now know the answer. Thanks for ruining my vacation ideas.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    3. Re:the answer? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      No, but it was discovered in yet another universe. Unfortunately they are still looking for the answer there.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    4. Re:the answer? by SinGunner · · Score: 1

      In the world where the answer is 49, the question "What does 7 times 7 equal?" is far less humorous.

  10. Ummm . . . by Orange+Crush · · Score: 4, Insightful

    . . . so it "can" explain (mathematically) the outcome of quantum level observations using the many worlds theory. But is it falsifiable?

    1. Re:Ummm . . . by druske · · Score: 1

      " so it "can" explain (mathematically) the outcome of quantum level observations using the many worlds theory. But is it falsifiable?"

      Yes and no.

    2. Re:Ummm . . . by somepunk · · Score: 1

      Actually, it isn't technically "a theory". It is an interpretation of quantum mechanics, of which there are many, which all give the same (in)correct predictions.

      Cheers!

      --
      Those people who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do. (Isaac Asimov)
    3. Re:Ummm . . . by kebes · · Score: 5, Informative

      This is a fairly subtle point, so I'm not sure that I'm going to explain myself properly... but here's my best shot:

      The Many-Worlds concept of quantum mechanics was originally presented as an interpretation of the theory. It was viewed by many as being ridiculous, or "non-economical with universes" as the joke goes. Work in fields like quantum decoherence has, over the last few decades, helped to explain how "normal" (classical) states emerge from quantum superpositions. Decoherence, briefly, explains how a superposition of quantum states evolves deterministically (no randomness!) into a discrete set of pseudo-classical states (due to entanglement with the many degrees of freedom available in the "environment"--i.e. the universe at large). This extension to quantum mechanics has been tested experimentally and verified.

      The remaining issue in a theory of quantum + decoherence is that the classical states have the right probabilities, but there is still nothing to explain why we observe a particular classical state (photon measured spin-up instead of spin-down). However the (ad-hoc) postulate of wavefunction collapse, no longer being necessary to explain how the probabilities arise, can in fact be entirely removed if we allow that the global superposition never collapses.

      Thus, a local observer (e.g. an instrument or a human) perceives a single outcome only because they are a participant in this "global superposition" (the superposition of the entire universe). The wavefunction of the universe as a whole evolves deterministically.


      Okay, that was a long-winded preamble, and I still have not answered your question. The answer is that the existence of multiple universes cannot be falsified per se. But, then again, in this formalism Many-Worlds is not an axiom: it is a prediction. Given that it is a prediction of a thoroughly successful theory, we should be compelled to accept the prediction as correct even if we cannot directly test it. We can, at least, test other predictions of the theory. In principle, we can test for superpositions as big as we like (superpositions of entire galaxies, etc.), but we cannot ever test that final prediction: that the universe as a whole is also in a superposition. But, if we've tested the theory in every other way, can we really "throw away" the final prediction about the global superposition?

      Now, I know many of you will counter-argue that non-falsifiable predictions are not science, and should be ignored as metaphysics, or even "meaningless." Perhaps. But allow me to draw an analogy: One of the fundamental assumptions of science is that there is such a thing as "physical law." That is, we can extrapolate from one measurement to others. Put otherwise, we accept that the laws of physics are the same here as they are in a distant galaxy. Note that, because of the expansion of the universe and the speed-of-light-limit, there are some regions of the universe that we cannot ever explore (even in principle, assuming our current physics is correct). Thus, the prediction that "the laws of physics are invariant across the universe" is itself unfalsifiable, yet we generally accept it to be true.

      Similarly, we need but extend this logic into quantum mechanics, where if assume that the laws of physics are the same everywhere in the universe (and everywhere within the wavefunction of the universe), then we should accept that the global superposition is probably correct: i.e.: Many Worlds "exist" (but are inaccessible to us). I agree that this conclusion is uncomfortable, but it appears inescapable given our current understanding of physics. (Note: As a scientist I'm of course allowing for the possibility of future measurements disproving some part of this logic--this is entirely based on our current understanding.)

      As I said, the point I'm trying to make is not obvious. Hopefully I've not muddled it beyond understanding.

    4. Re:Ummm . . . by kebes · · Score: 1
      (Sorry to reply to my own post.)

      For anyone interested, this argument was made much more clearly than I am able to in a recent Nature review article:
      Max Tegmark. "Many lives in many worlds" Nature 448, 23-24 (5 July 2007) | doi:10.1038/448023a; Published online 4 July 2007.
      The blurb is:

      Accepting quantum physics to be universally true, argues Max Tegmark, means that you should also believe in parallel universes.
      The article is only available to subscribers, but here are some quotes from the article:

      The key point is that parallel universes are not a theory in themselves, but a prediction of certain theories. For a theory to be falsifiable, we need not observe and test all its predictions -- one will do.

      Because Einstein's general theory of relativity has successfully predicted many things we can observe, we also take seriously its predictions for things we cannot, such as the internal structure of black holes. Analogously, successful predictions by unitary quantum mechanics have made scientists take more seriously its other predictions, including parallel universes.
    5. Re:Ummm . . . by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      . . . so it "can" explain (mathematically) the outcome of quantum level observations using the many worlds theory. But is it falsifiable?

      It is falsifiable. Kill yourself (or wait until you die). If you succeed in dying, you have disproved the many-worlds interpretation. Quantum immortality predicts you will live forever.

    6. Re:Ummm . . . by Raffaello · · Score: 1

      That is, we can extrapolate from one measurement to others. Put otherwise, we accept that the laws of physics are the same here as they are in a distant galaxy. Note that, because of the expansion of the universe and the speed-of-light-limit, there are some regions of the universe that we cannot ever explore (even in principle, assuming our current physics is correct). Thus, the prediction that "the laws of physics are invariant across the universe" is itself unfalsifiable, yet we generally accept it to be true.

      That the laws of physics are invariant (first explicitly stated in geology as uniformitarianism) is not a prediction, but rather an axiom of science. All logical systems, science included, have certain underpinnings upon which the rest of the logical system rests. In science these are variously taken to be the aforementioned uniformitarian assumptions (i.e., "laws" are spatiotemporally invariant), Materialism, or some non-solipsistic view of the universe (i.e., there exists some real world beyond my mind), and (one often overlooked) sentience or awareness, because science requires sentient observers to make the observations out of which the logical system that is science is built.

      None of these things can be proven as "predictions" precisely because attempting to do so would be a logical circularity - they are all logical prerequisites of the logical system that is science. Therefore science itself cannot either prove them true nor disprove them any more than geometers can "prove" that parallel lines never meet. These things:

      1. a real world that is
      2. governed by uniform laws
      3. inhabited by sentient observers

      simply have to be accepted by scientists as axiomatic truths or there can be no logical system we call science at all.

      With this understanding the status of many worlds and the absurdly large number of parallel universes it entails is quite different from uniformity of natural laws. One (spatiotemporally uniform natural laws) is an assumption necessary for the scientific enterprise to function at all. The other (laughably large numbers of entire freakin' universes) is a clear and moreover, literal violation of occams razor which he originally phrased as:

      entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity.

      Positing even a single additional universe constitutes multiplying a nearly uncountable number of entities. Occam's razor is clearly incompatible with many worlds. I think that those who seriously entertain the idea don't fully understand what Occam's razor says or means.

      We now return you to parallel universes' proper place in our culture as the home of a bearded, agonizer wielding Commander Spock.

    7. Re:Ummm . . . by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1
      Thus, a local observer (e.g. an instrument or a human) perceives a single outcome only because they are a participant in this "global superposition" (the superposition of the entire universe). The wavefunction of the universe as a whole evolves deterministically.

      So if I'm understanding you correctly, this means that MWI takes the indeterminism out of the universe at large and instead puts it to the measurement of each separate individual (be it instrument or conscious observer) as to what aspect of the multiverse is being experienced at any given time.

      I'm sorry but I don't see how this is an improvement.

      --
      Happy people make bad consumers.
    8. Re:Ummm . . . by kebes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That the laws of physics are invariant (first explicitly stated in geology as uniformitarianism [wikipedia.org]) is not a prediction, but rather an axiom of science.
      Agreed. It is an axiom of science as we do it.

      With this understanding the status of many worlds and the absurdly large number of parallel universes it entails is quite different from uniformity of natural laws. One (spatiotemporally uniform natural laws) is an assumption necessary for the scientific enterprise to function at all. The other (laughably large numbers of entire freakin' universes) is a clear and moreover, literal violation of occams razor
      Here I think you've misunderstood me. The point is that Many-Worlds is not an assumption: it is a prediction of certain theories (namely, modern unitary quantum mechanics).

      So, given two axioms:
      1. Laws of physics are invariant
      2. Unitary quantum mechanics describes the universe

      We obtain a wide variety of predictions, from transistors to molecules, and so on. One of the predictions is "the universe exists in a global superposition." The proliferation of branches is consequence of the theory, not an axiom.

      We may find the prediction uncomfortable, but without a logical (or empirical) reason to discard it (but retain all the other predictions, which we like better), how can we ignore it? (Honest question... I'm not an expert in philosophy so perhaps I'm committing a fallacy.)

      Positing even a single additional universe constitutes multiplying a nearly uncountable number of entities.
      To emphasize, nothing is being posited (beyond the axioms mentioned; I'm assuming no one is disputing that science and quantum mechanics can say something meaningful about the universe).

      Besides, the point is that unitary quantum mechanics is actually reductionist. It does away with a (superfluous?) ad-hoc assumption (about 'collapse of the wavefunction'). The resulting theory predicts a single object: a global wavefunction. That you or I call its various branches 'universes' doesn't mean anything is actually proliferating.

      We now return you to parallel universes' proper place in our culture as the home of a bearded, agonizer wielding Commander Spock.
      It's important to emphasize that the "Many Worlds" predicted by modern unitary quantum mechanics are not really the "wacky possibilities" seen on shows like Sliders. They represent the branches of superpositions of a global wavefunction. If you branch from a current position, the possibilities are deterministic and mostly uninteresting (e.g. an atom decays a moment later in one branch than another).

      Yes, the global wavefunction would include many variations (maybe even variants where historical events played out differently because millions of quantum branches biased events a certain way instead of another way), but all of these variations are ruled by the same deterministic physics. And, importantly, it's not a matter of "whatever universe you can imagine is out there somewhere!"--the possibilities are strictly limited by deterministic evolution of the wavefunction and the initial conditions of the universe.
    9. Re:Ummm . . . by kebes · · Score: 1

      So if I'm understanding you correctly, this means that MWI takes the indeterminism out of the universe at large and instead puts it to the measurement of each separate individual (be it instrument or conscious observer) as to what aspect of the multiverse is being experienced at any given time.
      Well, the point would be that (loosely speaking) you experience one outcome, and an alternate version of you experiences the other outcome. Really you are both part of the same global wavefunction, but in different "parts" of the wavefunction there are different states for the memories of the different "versions of you." Each branch of MWI represents one "classically-consistent" history.

      I'm sorry but I don't see how this is an improvement.
      It's not an improvement. It's a prediction of a theory, plain and simple. Quantum mechanics wasn't a conceptual "improvement" either: many people hated it, compared to the predictable determinism that was previously assumed. But, it turns out that quantum mechanics was right, so we're stuck with it.

      The debate right now is about whether MWI is right or not. Whether or not it is an improvement in conceptual terms is irrelevant. As a prediction of a rigorously verified theory, it's hard to ignore.
    10. Re:Ummm . . . by yariv · · Score: 1

      First, why the fact that the universe is in a superposition means there are many-worlds? It seems to me as if it means there is one world, but it's not classic. Is one superpositioned universe the same as many classical "universes"?

      Second, If we will accept that there are many worlds what does it mean? If we can't interact with them in any way, they don't exist (or so says William of Ockham). If we can interact with them, we should change the terminology, because they are part of the universe, as implied from its name, and they are not parallel, as they meet each other.

      Last, even if there are many worlds, I think the article is misleading as to the difference. They take them as different in the manner of branches of decisions like "will it be an accident or a near miss", instead of using every thing as a branch "will I change into a small giraffe". We can, of course, go much further, as we are talking of the possible ways of the universe's wave function (which we can't possibly understand without a model greater then the universe) to collapse, which might result in "scenarios" we can't imagine.

    11. Re:Ummm . . . by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1

      But quantum mechanics was accepted because of its ability to make accurate predicitions to natural phenomenon, and thus was an improvement of what came before it. Since MWI (observers split into experiences of multiple outcomes) and the alternative (the particles of the universe operates as wavefunctions except when forced to a particular state by an "observation") are different interpretations of QM, the only criteria to judge them by is what works better "conceptually".

      --
      Happy people make bad consumers.
    12. Re:Ummm . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pffft... Says YOU!

    13. Re:Ummm . . . by kebes · · Score: 1

      First, why the fact that the universe is in a superposition means there are many-worlds? It seems to me as if it means there is one world, but it's not classic. Is one superpositioned universe the same as many classical "universes"?
      Bingo. The theory is that there is a single wavefunction. Just one. A local observer will only experience one branch, and may call that "the universe." But really there is just one quantum universe, which has many branches, each one of which looks like a classical universe.

      In a way, the provocative name "Many Worlds" is unfortunate--because it muddies the waters with images of "alternate realities" instead of focusing on what the theory is predicting: a single wavefunction.

      If we can't interact with them in any way, they don't exist
      That is a deep philosophical question. I agree that axiomatic statements that cannot be verified dont' exist. If I say "there is an invisible, intagible, unmeasurable faerie on your desk" that is meaningless. But Many-Worlds are a prediction (not an axiom) of unitary quantum mechanics. So even if we can't directly measure the other branches, it doesn't mean they don't exist. Put otherwise: if 99.99999% of the predictions of a theory are found to be true, what do you do with a final, untestable prediction?

      Last, even if there are many worlds, I think the article is misleading as to the difference.
      I think many people get misled into thinking of "many worlds" as being parallel realities where any crazy thing you can imagine is "out there somewhere." This isn't the case. Each branch evolves deterministically. Given that the universe had a single set of initial conditions, this puts a constraint on what types of classical realities will be represented in the global wavefunction. The number of branches is indeed staggering--but then again, each branch will be a pseudo-classical universe much like the one you experience.
    14. Re:Ummm . . . by kebes · · Score: 1

      Let me put it this way. We have two theories before us:

      A. Unitary quantum mechanics.
      B. Unitary quantum, plus an ad-hoc assumption about 'wavefunction collapse.'

      Both "A" and "B" are able to predict experimental results properly. However, B is unsatisfying to many physicists because there are no clearly-defined rules about how to apply the 'wavefunction collapse' rule.

      Modern experiments are putting bounds on this 'wavefunction collapse' and it seems like arbitrarily large objects can exist in superpositions. (Maybe even as large as the universe?) Thus there is no reason to discount A. Moreover A is a simpler theory than B, and it gets the right answer just as frequently, so it would seem preferable.

      Now, theory A, if taken literally, implies MWI.

      You can view this as a conceptual difference if you like (i.e.: we are picking A instead of B just because it is simpler). But the point is that MWI is a prediction, not an interpretation. (The confusion arises because it is called an "interpretation" and was originally presented as such--but that is no longer how MWI fits in with quantum theory.)

    15. Re:Ummm . . . by vertinox · · Score: 1

      Occam's razor cannot explain observable human consciousness. (But then again consciousness cannot be falsified other than by the observer denying the fact he is observing)

      Seeing that we find ourselves conscious and able to observe and do find that simply observing quantum states affects its outcomes must have an explanation to why the laws of physics are the way they are.

      If they were any other way then perhaps a carbon life form would not be around to observe anything at all. (Anthropic principle)

      That said, perhaps if the laws of physics needed to be different for something to exist then they would be so because no sentient beings would be around to observe the laws of physics in the first place if life could not exist in that universe.

      But as far as we know... Life only exists under the circumstances we see before us, so chances are this is the set of laws needed.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    16. Re:Ummm . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think saying that it predicts you will live forever is a bit much.

      At the most, it predicts that you will live as long as it is possible for you to live.
      Or, rather, that one of your copies will live as long as it is possible for you to live.

      Which means that if you, yourself, live to be, say, a hundred or so, you can say that there's some higher probability that the many worlds interpretation is true.

      But other people can't say the same, just by observing that some people live to be a hundred or so.

      Even you dying young doesn't disprove it, because it's impossible to show that you wouldn't have died younger in the parallel universes.

    17. Re:Ummm . . . by yariv · · Score: 1

      So even if we can't directly measure the other branches, it doesn't mean they don't exist. The question is not if we can "directly measure" other branches, but do we (our branch) have any kind of relations with them. Do they have any effect on us? If so, we might be able to test it.
      I'll accept the possibility that the universe is not a classical one, anyway.

      I think many people get misled into thinking of "many worlds" as being parallel realities where any crazy thing you can imagine is "out there somewhere." This isn't the case. Each branch evolves deterministically. As for me turning into a giraffe, I've never said it is probable, just that it's possible. I'll give you the fact that it's extremely improbable. For a different example, it is possible for the atmosphere to divide into to layers, nitrogen below and oxygen above, it is just extremely improbable (no matter what the laws of thermodynamics will tell you, they are mostly statistical). In a similar manner, there is a chance (an extremely slim one) that I will turn into a giraffe (a small one, as I am human), you just need many particles moving in specific directions all at once.
    18. Re:Ummm . . . by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Is the axiom that physical law is the same everywhere in the universe really unfalsifiable?

      I mean, practically speaking, we are unlikely to ever go to some other distant galaxy and to verify physics there. But there is nothing in the laws of science that prevent us from doing that. It is "practically" impossible to falsify the axiom, but not theoretically impossible.

      The many universes theory, is, on the other hand, impossible to falsify in every way (theoretically and practically). The universes are disjoint. We could never travel to them. We could never exchange information between two disjoint universes such to communicate the truth or falseness of the axiom of physical law.

      This I think is the real definition of non-falsifiable, and for this reason, I think that theories like the many universes theories are science fiction and not even remotely scientific. Also they're a ridiculous waste of time; I didn't read the comments to this Slashdot article because I think that many universes is an interesting theory, I just wanted to be amused by how the misinformed attempt to justify it.

      Don't take that the wrong way - your post was informative and interesting. But people who really believe in stuff like multiple universes and time travel and think it's all very scientific just really make me laugh out loud.

    19. Re:Ummm . . . by trifish · · Score: 1

      Note that, because of the expansion of the universe and the speed-of-light-limit, there are some regions of the universe that we cannot ever explore

      Cannot ever explore? Worm holes and other types of "shortcuts" that would essentially allow a form of teleportation were not invented by sci-fi writers, but by theoretical physicists. If you changed the word "cannot" to "might not be able to", I could agree with you.

    20. Re:Ummm . . . by kebes · · Score: 1

      I mean, practically speaking, we are unlikely to ever go to some other distant galaxy and to verify physics there. But there is nothing in the laws of science that prevent us from doing that. It is "practically" impossible to falsify the axiom, but not theoretically impossible.
      According to our current understanding of physics, it is impossible, even in principle, to travel to some parts of the universe. Given that the universe is expanding and will expand forever (exponentially, according to most recent measurements), and that you cannot travel faster than the speed of light, there are regions of the universe sufficiently distant that a local observer cannot ever reach them. Thus our observation volume is finite, even if the universe is infinite. Yet no one objects to statements about the laws of physics being the same beyond that observational barrier (or about galaxies existing there, etc.).

      Another example (that I mentioned in another post) is using relativity to make statements about the internals of black holes, which are (according to our current understanding) inaccessible even in principle.

      The many universes theory, is, on the other hand, impossible to falsify in every way (theoretically and practically).
      Many worlds isn't a theory. It is a prediction of quantum theory. I agree that many-worlds is unfalsifiable in principle, which certainly bothers me. But the theory of quantum theory is falsifiable. So if a falsifiable theory is tested rigorously, and all of its falsifiable predictions remain robust (no contradiction with reality is ever encountered), then what do you do about the one single remaining prediction? Do you throw it away, just because you don't like it? Do you ignore it, because it doesn't have any effect on your life? Or do you say "amazingly, this is probably a true statement about the universe--even though we can't test it."

      Honestly I don't know what we are supposed to do when faced with such situations. It's not at all obvious.

      Don't take that the wrong way - your post was informative and interesting. But people who really believe in stuff like multiple universes and time travel and think it's all very scientific just really make me laugh out loud.
      No offense taken. To be honest I find many-worlds incredible, too. For many years I found it unnervingly uncomfortable or downright ludicrous. But after looking at the fundamentals of quantum mechanics for long enough, it became sort of "unavoidable."

      It's also interesting that the proportion of physicists who take MWI seriously is increasing year by year. Not because we have direct evidence of it--but because if you accept unitary quantum mechanics, it's difficult to refute MWI.

      (I should also point out that the label "multiple universes" is really unfortunate, since it detracts from what's really going on. It conjures images of alternate realities, like a Quantum Leap or Sliders, rather than describing what is really going on: a single global wavefunction whose 'branches' will be interpreted as disjoint classical realities by local observers.)
    21. Re:Ummm . . . by Manchot · · Score: 1

      Occam's razor is not a law of the universe. Though it is a philosophical law underpinning the philosophy of science, it would be a cardinal sin to invoke it to make predictions. For example, it would be a lot easier for me to say, "Gravity is magic" than it is for me to list the 26 or so axioms underpinning classical mechanics. (By my count, there are four axioms of propositional calculus, four predicate calculus axioms, eight equality axioms, seven ZFC axioms, two rules of inference, and Newton's force law.)

    22. Re:Ummm . . . by lawpoop · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have another question, which might sound kind of naive. If we can accept that there are many universes, with new ones sprouting all the time, is there some constraint on how those universes are? That there might be an infinite set within a certain limit? Otherwise, if, in one of these other universes, the laws of physics are different, then those inhabitants or observers might be able to travel between universes -- just like in another universe where the speed of light follows different laws, they might be able to observe the whole universe.

      Another poster asked "Why am I experiencing this universe?" To which a poster replied, "Because you are in this one. If you were in a different one you would wonder the same thing. That's the anthropic principle."

      So then, if the anthropic principle holds multi-versally, then each observer is trapped in a universe of singular experience. But logically, if anything can change in a forked universe, including the laws of physics, we might imagine a universe where the inhabitants could traverse one or more universes. They might ask, "Why do I experience these universes?" Furthermore, there might be a universe where the laws of physics are such that inhabitants can traverse *any* universe -- a universal universe, so to speak. They wouldn't wonder why they were having a singular experience -- their universe would contain *all* universes. They would be experiencing everything! "Why do I experience everything?"

      So what really is different between all the forking universes? They must have some commonality, at least in the laws of physics. If not, then there is the possibility of a universe where you can traverse universes. Am I off base here? Can the laws of physics be different in another universe, even if it is descendant of a universe with laws like ours?

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    23. Re:Ummm . . . by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      First, why the fact that the universe is in a superposition means there are many-worlds? It seems to me as if it means there is one world, but it's not classic.

      Yes. But what we see is not that one real world, but "classical projections" of it. And of them, there exist several. Especially measurement results are only relative to each projection, and there exist in general other projections with different results. That is, "parallel worlds".

      Second, If we will accept that there are many worlds what does it mean? If we can't interact with them in any way, they don't exist (or so says William of Ockham).

      No. William of Ockham didn't say anything at all about existence. He put up a rule for making explanations: Don't add things you don't really need. Now you might claim that you don't need parallel worlds. However, the parallel worlds are not something added, but they are a result of not adding something, where that something is the collapse of the wave function. That is, in standard quantum mechanics you have two sets of rules for the time evolution of states, one to use when you don't look, and another one to use when you look; the MWI throws away the latter set of rules and postulates that there's only one set of rules. Thus it obeys Ockhams Razor by throwing away an obviously unneeded second set of rules present in standard (i.e. Copenhagen) quantum mechanics.

      Last, even if there are many worlds, I think the article is misleading as to the difference. They take them as different in the manner of branches of decisions like "will it be an accident or a near miss", instead of using every thing as a branch "will I change into a small giraffe".

      If there's a possibility for you to change into a small giraffe, however small the chance, there will be a branch of reality where this happens. If the laws of nature forbid you to change into a small giraffe, there will be no such branch.

      We can, of course, go much further, as we are talking of the possible ways of the universe's wave function (which we can't possibly understand without a model greater then the universe) to collapse, which might result in "scenarios" we can't imagine.

      Of course the whole point of MWI is to get rid of the collapse ...
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    24. Re:Ummm . . . by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 1

      > According to our current understanding of physics, it is impossible, even in principle,
      > to travel to some parts of the universe. Given that the universe is expanding and will
      > expand forever (exponentially, according to most recent measurements), and that you cannot
      > travel faster than the speed of light, there are regions of the universe sufficiently
      > distant that a local observer cannot ever reach them. Thus our observation volume is
      > finite, even if the universe is infinite. Yet no one objects to statements about the laws
      > of physics being the same beyond that observational barrier (or about galaxies existing
      > there, etc.).

      But viewed in this way, there would be nothing that could ever be called unfalsifiable. Because we could never test the laws of physics in every single point in space in order to be "absolutely sure" that physical law is the same everywhere. And also we'd never be able to falsify the claim that the laws of physics don't change over time because we'd never be able to test these laws at all points in time, ad infinitum, and in every part of space.

      In my limited understanding, falsifiable just means whether or not an experiment could be carried out which could test the validity of a theory. Many universes (and I'm referring to the idea of there really being alternate parallel realities, I think maybe we are miscommunicating on this) cannot be experimentally tested for, so are not falsifiable by this definition.

      Someone else pointed out that physical law isn't even a theory, it's an axiom of physics and so isn't subject to the question of falsification. I fully admit that you have to have some basic axioms that stand on faith and without requiring experimental validation, and physical law and the very basic observable phenomenon (such as the existence of time and space and such) fall into that camp for me and pretty much everyone else.

      And I think you make a good point; we've been talking about somewhat different things. You are talking about a model for explaining unitary quantum mechanics using a single global wavefunction with local observers and such all operating on a quantum scale. I'm talking about "parallel universes" and time travel and other such nonsense that I think many people believe in and want to scrape up some kind of "scientific" justification for. Perhaps no real scientist actually believes in the parallel universes idea, but I remember reading Stephen Hawkin's "A Brief History of Time" and convincing myself that this is what he believed, but I very well may have just been misunderstanding his writing.

    25. Re:Ummm . . . by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1
      A. Unitary quantum mechanics.
      B. Unitary quantum, plus an ad-hoc assumption about 'wavefunction collapse.'

      Really? Because I was under the impression that "wavefunction collapse" was simply a collision between particles that limits the possibilities of their wavefunctions. For example, in a double-slit experiment particles can go through two slits simultaneously causing an interference pattern to build up over time. When bouncing photons off of the particles in a certain way, the possible path of each particle is limited to one slit and the interference pattern disappears. Simple. I guess I don't see what the contention is here about what constitutes a collapse.

      I don't see A as being simpler at all. In MWI a person splits between many possible states just because and yet we experience just one of these because of explanations that amount to hand-waving. The alternative is that particles pick certain options during collapses rather than others just because, and that's what we observe. Both explain the exact same outcome in different manner. One just has much fewer universes than the other. :)

      --
      Happy people make bad consumers.
    26. Re:Ummm . . . by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      I think a really interesting point that you don't mention is that historically the many worlds theory was introduced after the traditional copenhagen interpretation. My understanding of the many worlds theory (I don't know any more about it than you mention, frankly) is that the formalism is identical to standard qm. In the sense that it doesn't give any new predictions relative to the copenhagen interpretation, then, its contribution was philosophical, not scientific. The question is if it had come first (with all the math of QM of course), would quantum mechanics make us think of a deterministic multiverse rather than an indeterminstic single universe.

    27. Re:Ummm . . . by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      Many Worlds "exist" (but are inaccessible to us) Another naive question: Inaccessible in physics usually means there is no transmission or communication between things. Not matter, energy, or information. So if there can't be any information exchange between parallel universes, how is it that we can become aware of their existence, through mathematics? Doesn't knowledge of multiverse in any universe require some information to leak between universes? In other words, if we have any knowledge of another universe, hasn't some information from that universe ( the basic fact of its existence ) had to have gotten to ours, therefore; they are not completely inaccessible?

      Could you say then that perception of logic, mathematics, or law, is a perception of multiverse? ( I hesitate to say "the multiverse" because if multiverse is true, "one" or "many" don't really make sense. ) That somehow, our consciousness has transcended the normal perception of a single universe, through mathematics?
      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    28. Re:Ummm . . . by Stuntmonkey · · Score: 1

      Positing even a single additional universe constitutes multiplying a nearly uncountable number of entities. Occam's razor is clearly incompatible with many worlds. I think that those who seriously entertain the idea don't fully understand what Occam's razor says or means.

      The question is how does one apply Occam's razor in this case. The traditional Copenhagen interpretation of QM has this funny aspect to it, namely that evolution of the wavefunction is unitary until you get to this magical, unexplained thing called "wavefunction collapse" for which there is no real explanation. The theory posits that collapse occurs when you make a measurement, which sounds good until you start asking what really constitutes a "measurement" (i.e., what triggers this nonunitary "collapse" process)? Any kind of recording device? Intelligence? Consciousness? Amplification of a detector signal to the macroscopic realm? Where is the dividing line between microscopic and macroscopic? Etc, etc. Nobody has ever come up with a universally satisfactory explanation of collapse within the Copenhagen framework, so at best the theory is incomplete.

      What Everett did was similar to what Einstein did with relativity: In effect he said, let's take our ideas seriously and just apply them in the simplest and most uniform way we can. In the Many-Worlds interpretation there is thus no distinction between microscopic and macroscopic, and no unexplained "collapse" process. Everything is unitary evolution, and all of the questions in the last paragraph simply evaporate. Many people after Everett have worked to understand quantum measurement and decoherence processes in rigorous terms, and understand why as participants in the global wavefunction we see classical randomness and a measurement process that appears nonunitary emerge as artifacts of our imperfect information.

      Tegmark sums it up well as "Many Worlds vs. Many Words". The Copenhagen interpretation gives you the economy of one universe, but at the expense of taking a lot of words to explain the nonunitary "collapse" process (and it ultimately has never succeeded). So what are we trying to economize with Occam's razor, worlds or words?

    29. Re:Ummm . . . by kebes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If we can accept that there are many universes, with new ones sprouting all the time, is there some constraint on how those universes are? That there might be an infinite set within a certain limit?
      Short answer: there are constraints and limits.

      Long answer:
      First off, some of the discussion here is getting confused because people are equating the "many universes" of the Many-Worlds Interpretation with the "parallel realities" espoused by other theories (but, most prominently displayed in sci-fi), where "anything goes" or any possible arrangement of atoms (or even laws of physics) is possible, or even exists.

      I'm talking about Many-Worlds, which is an untested prediction of modern quantum theory. I'm not talking about parallel realities (for which there is currently no proof and which no mainstream theory predict). In Many-Worlds, the branches evolve deterministically from the current state (according to the equations of quantum mechanics). This means that along each branch (each "universe" if you prefer), the laws of physics are invariant, and are exactly what we are used to (quantum mechanics + relativity). Moreover, because the universe is evolving from a specific initial state, there are constraints on what the branches will look like. You won't get "every wild thing you can imagine": only those branches which can evolve from a current state will be represented in the global superposition.

      So the various branches of Many-Worlds look pretty much exactly like the universe you are comfortable with (planets, stars, galaxies). Along one branch an atom might decay and along the other branch it might not decay (yet)... In principle some branches may have quantum choices such that normally improbably things occur, but that's balanced out by the vast majority of branches which are, basically, boring.
    30. Re:Ummm . . . by Antony.Muss · · Score: 0

      Let's see if my bad karma prohibits me from collapsing wavefunctions in my favor...

      Lay-people interpret the MWI to mean that any decision they could have conceivably made happens in the branching universes. But someone here gave the example that it isn't reasonable to think that in one branching universe he magically transforms into a giraffe. Likewise, it doesn't seem reasonable to think that a person would make any possible decision.

      So how might a person's high-level behavior be affected by stuff on the quantum level? Is it like a chaos-theory thing where light from the Sun might have taken two paths, and a few weeks down the road I'm here drinking tea and reading Slashdot in one universe, and at the bookstore in another universe because the weather is better and I'm not worried about my car's poor braking?

    31. Re:Ummm . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think that the collapse of the wavefunction is required to calculate the probabilities of particular measurements. The Schroedinger equation + Born interpretation of the wavefunction does that. The collapse of the wavefunction is required in the Copenhagen interpretation to explain why we observe particular eigenvalues corresponding to particular eigenstates upon measurement, and not superpositions of eigenstates.

    32. Re:Ummm . . . by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      Check out here to cast doubt that even the laws of physics are invariant.

      Hmm. C changing kinda sucks when you think about it. What else has changed? Gravity? Mass of an electron? Plancks constant?

      Yuck.

      --
    33. Re:Ummm . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      put the bong down and read a quantum mechanics book.

    34. Re:Ummm . . . by yariv · · Score: 1

      Yes. But what we see is not that one real world, but "classical projections" of it. And of them, there exist several. Especially measurement results are only relative to each projection, and there exist in general other projections with different results. That is, "parallel worlds". The question is, can they have any kind of effect on our measurement. If they can, they are not parallel worlds. if they can't, they are not part of science. Besides, a superpositioned universe and many classical ones are not the same as a concept, which is the only way parallel worlds might exist.

      Of course the whole point of MWI is to get rid of the collapse ... If you're talking of our observations as a "world" you state that every branch is a world, and in every branch, the universe behaves as if the wave function collapse, isn't it?
    35. Re:Ummm . . . by GryMor · · Score: 1

      Laws of physics are, by definition, immutable. If a law of physics looks mutable (or a constant looks like it's changing), then one of two things is true, either your measurements are somehow wrong or it must be an approximation, derived from some underlying law. If c changes over time, then c must not be a constant, but instead, must be a local property, somehow derived from the state of the universe.

      --
      Realities just a bunch of bits.
    36. Re:Ummm . . . by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1
      Max Tegmark's article "Many lives in many worlds" is available in preprint on arXiv:

      http://arxiv.org/abs/0707.2593

      If you really want your mind blown try reading this paper by Tegmark:

      http://arxiv.org/abs/0704.0646

      The Mathematical Universe

    37. Re:Ummm . . . by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      The question is, can they have any kind of effect on our measurement. If they can, they are not parallel worlds. if they can't, they are not part of science.

      They have an effect on measurement, because they cause the apparent collapse of the wave function. Without them you have to postulate that collapse separately.

      Of course the question of what exists and what doesn't is inherently philosophical. Physics is also compatible with solipsism, in which case the physical laws just govern what I personally observe (because in solipsism that's all there is). Strictly speaking, physics (and any other natural science) is just about describing our observations, and making predictions about future observations. Everything beyond that is philosophy.

      However, already from the physical point of view, the MWI is superior: It simply needs less assumptions. It can derive laws which the standard (Copenhagen) interpretation must postulate. That's usually the hallmark of a better theory: You must make less assumptions. For example, Kepler's laws were better than the old Ptolemaic system not because the latter got planet movements wrong, but just because it was simpler: It just needed less parameters. Lorentz aether theory is as good as special relativity in describing special-relativistic experiments, but special relativity is simpler, because it doesn't need an aether. On the latter, note that the aether is not something which is derived, but something additional which is postulated.

      Besides, a superpositioned universe and many classical ones are not the same as a concept, which is the only way parallel worlds might exist.

      At the fundamental level, there's of course no classical universe. However on the level of our perception thereis an (apparent) classical universe. That one corresponds to a certain projection of the universal wave function. However on the fundamental level, the wave function doesn't distinguish between that projection and certain others which are orthogonal to it. Thus if we take "our" classical universe as real, we must give all the other universes the same status. Of course only if we accept the postulate that the universe is fundamentally quantum-mechanic. Which is a reasonable assumption because it's the best one we currently have (of course that doesn't mean it must be true; after all, before we had quantum mechanics, the most reasonable assumption was that the universe is fundamentally classical).

      If you're talking of our observations as a "world" you state that every branch is a world, and in every branch, the universe behaves as if the wave function collapse, isn't it?

      Sort of. The "collapse" of the wave function is the change from the pre-measurement branch to one of the post-measurement branches.
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    38. Re:Ummm . . . by jagdish · · Score: 1

      If we can accept that there are many universes, with new ones sprouting all the time, is there some constraint on how those universes are? That there might be an infinite set within a certain limit?

      Fry: "So there's an infinite number of parallel universes?"

      Professor Farnsworth: "No, just the two."
    39. Re:Ummm . . . by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      And, importantly, it's not a matter of "whatever universe you can imagine is out there somewhere!"--the possibilities are strictly limited by deterministic evolution of the wavefunction and the initial conditions of the universe.

      There may be no married bachelors in any branch of the multiverse, but there's one right now where all the atoms of oxygen in my room spontaneously moved into a corner and I'm suffocating to death. That's a lot of possibilities.

      There certainly could be a dimension without shrimp.

    40. Re:Ummm . . . by FreeUser · · Score: 1

      Yes, the global wavefunction would include many variations (maybe even variants where historical events played out differently because millions of quantum branches biased events a certain way instead of another way), but all of these variations are ruled by the same deterministic physics. And, importantly, it's not a matter of "whatever universe you can imagine is out there somewhere!"--the possibilities are strictly limited by deterministic evolution of the wave function and the initial conditions of the universe.

      Yes, but how strictly limiting were the initial conditions of the universe at the time of the big bang? Does the wave function only include universes with our physical laws, or did the big bank propagate entire genres of parallel universes, some with laws quite different than ours? Even if all laws are identical across the set, how varied and variable were possible outcomes of the initial conditions? Given that we don't understand the inflationary periods of our observable universe's evolution, I'm inclined to suspect the variety of parallel worlds may be far greater than is perhaps politically correct to discuss in scientific circles.

      --
      The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  11. Well if you can't believe in God.... by isa-kuruption · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hey, if you don't believe in God because "you can't see him/her/it" then you can't believe in a parallel universe because, hey, you can't see it. Nor can you believe in dark matter/energy. /troll.

    1. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by loafula · · Score: 1

      yes, but we see hard evidence dark matter. i'm still waiting on the slightest shred of evidence that suggests "god" actually exists

      --
      FOXTROT UNIFORM CHARLIE KILO
    2. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by CaseCrash · · Score: 1, Funny

      Sure you can. You can believe anything you want to. Making logical sense has nothing to do with it. (reference: see all religions)

      --
      No, that link you posted to a web comic we've all seen a hundred times is not "obligatory."
    3. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      It's right here!

      Damn. I didn't even type that statement above. That's what I get for using Emacs in fundamental-mode to type Slashdot messages. ;)

    4. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by grahamd0 · · Score: 1

      I'm sure this isn't enraged/disgusted response you were looking for, since you're admittedly trolling, but as an atheist I have to agree with you.

      I don't believe in a personal god, and I consider the existence or nonexistence of a universal creator to irrelevant, as it cannot be known. Same goes for parallel universes. I won't believe in them unless or until we can interact with them in some determinable fashion.

      And the whole dark matter/dark energy thing strikes me as a load of humbug... saying there must be some undetectable, magical force acting on all the matter in the universe because the calculations we've come up with so far are inaccurate strikes me as lazy and uncreative.

    5. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by maharvey · · Score: 1

      I consider the existence or nonexistence of a universal creator to irrelevant, as it cannot be known Doesn't that make you an agnostic, rather than an atheist?

    6. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by ThirdPrize · · Score: 1

      I am an atheist but how would we know if God lit the blue touch paper for the big bang?

      --
      I have excellent Karma and I am not afraid to Troll it.
    7. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by jx100 · · Score: 1

      Agnosticism and atheism are not mutually exclusive. Atheism (well, weak atheism) is the lack of belief in a deity. Agnosticism is, as you point out above, the opinion that the existence or nonexistence of a deity cannot be conclusively proven either way. It is possible to not believe in the existence of a deity and believe that that nonexistence is not provable.

    8. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by db32 · · Score: 0

      Science never have and never will prove or disprove God. Science and Religion are entirely separate concepts and the "pro science/anti-religion" crowd is just as arrogant and ignorant as the "pro religion/anti-science crowd". Quite frankly it stuns me that these two groups don't get along better since they share so many traits. Both of these groups rely on an overly simplistic "angry 4yr old with a bucket of playdoh and crayons he used for creation" interpretation of God to prove their point.

      I'm just gunna throw this out there...but...do you think...that maybe...just MAYBE...that anything that us humans are capable of figuring out (you know DNA, dark matter, gravity, etc) that "God" probably has a pretty intimate working knowledge of? Quite frankly I think the Anti-religion group are just weak minded anti-scientists trying to blend in with the crowd. To think...once upon a time someone said "I'm still waiting on the slightest shred of evidence that suggest that DNA/Atoms/Cells/etc actually exist".

      That having been said maybe you can learn something from Francis S. Collins talking about God and DNA.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    9. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      saying there must be some undetectable, magical force acting on all the matter in the universe because the calculations we've come up with so far are inaccurate strikes me as lazy and uncreative.

      You don't think that scientists are working to figure out a way to detect them? Currently, dark matter and energy are placeholders that people use while they characterize the anomalies that brought the concepts about. If we assume that *something* causes the anomalies, then we can study it until we know enough about it to try to detect it directly. If we refuse to even think about the whole thing because it's "uncreative", then we're never going to solve anything.

    10. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last time I check, there was no irrefutable mandate from a parallel universe that two men shall not have relations, or that fathers should stone their daughters when they find that they are not virgins on their honeymoon, or that we shouldn't eat pork. Believe in God all you want, just don't pretend like that gives you some kind of authority over the rest of us.

    11. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by grahamd0 · · Score: 1

      Depends on your PoV, I guess.

      I don't believe in a "god" as organized religions would define them. I don't believe in an afterlife, and I don't believe that life has an inherent, divine purpose, so I would say I was an atheist.

      But I consider the idea that an outside entity may have created our universe to be a reasonable one. If you think that that entity must be labeled "god", then I suppose you could call me an agnostic.

    12. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      I'll feed this troll...

      The many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics doesn't fit a primary requirement which is that it be falsifiable. We need to be able to do an experiment that would have a different outcome of the hypothesis were true or false. As far as I know, nobody has thought of any such experiment yet. The many world interpretation is a philosophical debate, but not yet a scientific one.

      OTOH, dark matter and dark energy demonstrably do exist. There are repeatable experiments that show that dark matter definitely does exist. At least, there's something bending all the light and we sure can't see what it is, and the most logical explanation given the things we currently know about how the universe works indicates that there has to be a whole bunch of matter we can't see there.

      Dark energy is a little trickier. There all we can tell is that the expansion of the universe seems to be accelerating. The easiest interpretation of this piece of data is that there is some kind of stuff suffusing all of space that repels things that we will choose to call dark energy.

    13. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by jx100 · · Score: 1

      I have to disagree with your agreement there.

      The whole point behind this discovery is stepping towards the ability to actually prove the existence of these alternate universes. A mathematical proof saying something exists at the very least gives us direction on how to design experiments and demonstrate falsifiability. IIRC, these proofs also show how our universe would interact with others. Any event where a quantum wave collapses into one of its possibilities results in a multitude of universes, each with a different result. This requires interaction, and the first step in figuring out that interaction is to figure out that it exists, and how it behaves.

      Also, I should note that while dark energy hasn't been proven, there is at least one experiment that potentially proves its existence: ahref=http://arxiv.org/abs/0705.2171rel=url2html-2392http://arxiv.org/abs/0705.2171 > . This discovery would almost certainly not have been possible without the math beforehand to theorize on how it would react.

    14. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by tkinnun0 · · Score: 1

      I believe in God the same way I believe in the mathematical infinity.

    15. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remind me to not let you teach math.

    16. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by grahamd0 · · Score: 1

      It's good that people are working on that, and I suppose I typed hastily on that one.

      I acknowledge the reality that there are reactions in the universe we don't understand, and that dark energy and dark matter are metaphors for that lack of understanding. In that sense, I "believe" in dark matter and dark energy, but they're not (or may not be) real things.

    17. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Gregb05 · · Score: 1

      The case for dark matter/dark energy becomes a lot more believable when you consider that we couldn't detect large planets orbiting other stars, much less large objects just outside of Pluto as recently as 10 years ago.

      For most of human history we've only been able to see things emitting energy very strongly.

      Science is based on the concept that a meter is a meter, no matter where you are. Our calculations have worked startlingly well upon Earth, an issue comes about under very weak amounts of gravity; namely that it is stronger than our calculations predict. This can be solved by either changing our (very, very accurate) calculations, or by filling the universe with stuff we have yet to be able to see.

      Both solutions require a leap of faith; and many physicists are willing to believe they can't see something (our tools are far from perfect) rather than needing to throw out and recalculate everything unless there's substantial proof.

      Again, this is all dealing with things that we really don't know for sure one way or another, and one of the more challenging aspects is coming up with a theory that not only provides a fit for few objects such as a solar system's movement, but for things such as galaxy formation. Disclaimer: IANAP

      --
      --
    18. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Moredhel · · Score: 1

      Dark energy is a little trickier. There all we can tell is that the expansion of the universe seems to be accelerating. The easiest interpretation of this piece of data is that there is some kind of stuff suffusing all of space that repels things that we will choose to call dark energy.

      Or, more simply, the speed of light isn't a constant over time, and the red shift is due to the contortions forced on that light on its way here...? Why the need to invent a whole new energy we can't otherwise detect?

    19. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At last, another believer!

      Hail Thor!

    20. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Funny
      And the whole dark matter/dark energy thing strikes me as a load of humbug... saying there must be some undetectable, magical force acting on all the matter in the universe because the calculations we've come up with so far are inaccurate strikes me as lazy and uncreative.

      It worked once before. Calculations of the orbit of the planet Uranus were noticeably inaccurate; the planet wasn't quite where it ought to have been. One explanation was that this was the result of the gravitational effect of a large amount of dark matter. This dark matter was later found and named Neptune.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    21. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      I'm not a physicist, but it seems to me that dark matter (to some small extent) and dark energy definitely point to something being fundamentally mistaken in our current understanding of things. I think your explanation has as many problems as invoking some mysterious energy stuff pervading all of space, but again I'm not a physicist.

    22. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      To think...once upon a time someone said "I'm still waiting on the slightest shred of evidence that suggest that DNA/Atoms/Cells/etc actually exist".

      And they were quite right to say just that. Then the evidence was presented. That's science. It works, bitches.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    23. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I don't believe in a personal god, and I consider the existence or nonexistence of a universal
      >creator to irrelevant, as it cannot be known.

      I would assert this is untrue. It would be possible for the creator of the universe to show himself and be known. Many people assert that this has happened (in contradictory statements). What can't be done is proving the absence of a creator; it is potentially provable, but not falsifiable.

      The present problem, then, is choosing which eyewitness accounts to believe, or whether to disregard all of them categorically. The only other option is to axiomatically assert that there is no universal creator, which puts you into the realm of crackpots and pseudo-science.

    24. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by grahamd0 · · Score: 1

      Kepler's calculations were considered very accurate until Newton came along, and Newton's calculations are still very accurate despite the fact that he believed in instantaneous gravitational reactions, which we would consider ridiculous today.

      Dark Matter is a convenient metaphor for something we don't really understand at all.

    25. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by LittleBigLui · · Score: 1

      Science never have and never will prove or disprove God.


      Why? Of course, "prove" and "disprove" are hefty tasks (especially the latter), but assuming "god(s)" somehow interact(s) with the universe (and therefore have measurable effects), why exactly should he/she/it/they be outside the scope of science?
      --
      Free as in mason.
    26. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Science never have and never will prove or disprove God. Science and Religion are entirely separate concepts and the "pro science/anti-religion" crowd is just as arrogant and ignorant as the "pro religion/anti-science crowd". Quite frankly it stuns me that these two groups don't get along better since they share so many traits. Both of these groups rely on an overly simplistic "angry 4yr old with a bucket of playdoh and crayons he used for creation" interpretation of God to prove their point.


      I'm glad someone else sees this. I've noticed that only two groups interpret the bible literally: creationists and atheists. Note that I distinguish between atheists and agnostics.
    27. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by db32 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah and the time difference between "I think it works like this" and "See we can prove it now" grows increasingly large the more complex the subject matter. You realize that our understanding of things is still limited by our vantage point in the universe and that we DON'T actually understand all the workings many claim to. Quantum anything is a pretty good example of one of those monkey wrenches of "AHA bitches, and you thought you understood how this works!, Gotcha" The part that is Science is the "Damnit...lets try again a different way".

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    28. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by grahamd0 · · Score: 1

      If you believe that the creator (we'll assume this entity exists for the purpose of this discussion) has the ability to simply reveal itself to us, from outside the universe, at its whim, then you believe in miracles.

      This is OK, I'm not intolerant, but you're suggesting that within the context of our universe, this entity is not constrained by the physical laws of our universe, and therefore, those laws are not applicable at all times and in all places. Therefore, you assert that any observations we come up with may not be valid in the future and may not have been valid in the past because they can be invalidated on a whim. Essentially, we can learn nothing definitive.

      Thus, I cannot believe that the creator can simply reveal itself, because to believe that is to reject science entirely.

    29. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Science never have and never will prove or disprove God.

      That's a polite way of saying that all testable theories of God have been disproved, but plenty of untestable ones remain.

    30. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by m4g02 · · Score: 1

      Are you an idiot or what!) We scientist don't have any problem making theories of stuff we can't see, and we are quite happy testing their validity using mathematics, robotics, optics and all the tools we have at our disposal.

      The problem with the God theory is that we can't test it and it requires faith without asking any why or trying to come with a better explanation than that. THE GOD THEORY IS NOT COMPATIBLE WITH SCIENCE! The multi-verse theory is.

      Your comment only shows your lack of intelligence.

      --
      Sigs are for morons... Wait a minute...
    31. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      The many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics doesn't fit a primary requirement which is that it be falsifiable. We need to be able to do an experiment that would have a different outcome of the hypothesis were true or false. As far as I know, nobody has thought of any such experiment yet. The many world interpretation is a philosophical debate, but not yet a scientific one.

      That's not quite true, there's quantum suicide and immortality. Still, tests that require personal death are generally about as useful as religious beliefs. Even if many-worlds is true, a majority of universes will not have any proof. Even if a quantum suicide machine includes the entire earth, there will be a huge number of universes where humanity decides never to try it.

    32. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neptune? So it was a God, then.

    33. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by db32 · · Score: 1

      You are assuming that "God(s)" are an external force that must interact with the universe to have an effect*. Science is about determining the rules, regulations, and operations of all existance. Science does not invent anything, it discovers things that were previously unobserved. You are assuming that "God(s)" interactions will run counter to previously observed phenomenon. I find a (as best as we can tell) infinite existance adhering to an almost immesurably complex set of rules is FAR more impressive and evidence of "God" than things simply not following those rules. *I personally have beef with the personification of God as some external/individualistic being. We have proven over and over and over that humans externalize and personify damned near everything, but when it comes to God everyone seems to want to scream "But that one really is a person!".

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    34. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I don't believe in a personal god - so how personal does this god get with you anyway?

      I believe your personal god is only in your head and nowhere else.

    35. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Agenor · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is a subtile difference between the perturbations in Uranus' orbit and current dark matter. With Uranus, we had very fine measurements - thousand's of arcseconds precision. They actually were able to say 'there must be a planet about there' -- and it was. With dark matter the data is much sloppier. Part of this is no fault of the astronomer: dust clouds and individual variation in stars make it hard to get good data that is accurate to 10%. The other part is the astronomer's fault - their data analysis can be sloppy. As I saw in thesis class: published research on B-V vs stellar magnitude fits can be very poorly done, throwing out far too many outliers or using too many coefficients. This data then feeds distance measurements, which feed galactic rotation measurements, and so on. There is an unsound foundation for most work past a few thousand light years.

      The worst part is no one wants to correct this foundational work. There is not much glory in changing coefficients and contradicting published work only invites enemies.

      My main point is that a certain amount of non-luminous matter is to be expected. I would not be supprised though, when that unglamorous job of correcting all these fits is done, that the quantity and location of 'dark matter' is revised downwards. That, or we find something more fundamentally wrong (like with the precession of Mercury's orbit).

      Remember people used to believe in caloric.

    36. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 2, Informative

      It also failed to work once before. Calculations of the orbit of the planet Mercury were noticeably inaccurate; the planet wasn't quite where it ought to have been. One explanation was that this was the result of the gravitational effect of the planet Vulcan, which orbited so close to the Sun that it was practically impossible to observe. Then relativity came out, and the new calculations were accurate.

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
    37. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And so what if what you call a miracle could be constructed out of a combination of incredibly unlikely, but still possible events? As an extreme example, one substance could be transformed into another through random nuclear events. Many reported miracles could conceivably be constructed in this manner.

      So seeing this, you could conceive of the creator as being able to see all of the branches of possibilities and being able to choose among them. This creator could allow things to happen as they may the overwhelming majority of the time, while constraining the possibilities at other times. This would not change the laws of physics and assuming that the creator does not choose to meddle in experiments, we would not be able to detect the creator's meddling beyond the anecdotal evidence of miracles.

      What-ifs aside, I do believe in God, but I am largely skeptical of what most people claiming to be religious say. I interpret the Garden of Eden story as an allegory about free will which basically says that there is evil in the world because any human being would always choose a dynamic world in which they can make real choices over an unchanging paradise and so God has obligingly provided us with such a world.

    38. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      That's not quite true, there's quantum suicide and immortality.

      What is quantum suicide, and why does it help resolve whether or not the many worlds hypothesis is true? Similarly, how does immortality help resolve the issue?

    39. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by kartune85 · · Score: 0

      This is OK, I'm not intolerant, but you're suggesting that within the context of our universe, this entity is not constrained by the physical laws of our universe, and therefore, those laws are not applicable at all times and in all places. Therefore, you assert that any observations we come up with may not be valid in the future and may not have been valid in the past because they can be invalidated on a whim. Essentially, we can learn nothing definitive.

      Hmmm... that sounds about right. As humans, we have a very limited understanding of how things in this world work, let alone in the universe. After several thousand years, we've only just recently worked out how to fly short distances from the earth, we haven't figured out the algorithms neccessary for a singularity robot (previous discussion), within the past century or so we've only just figured out how to reproduce animated real-life images(TV, projector), etc.

      The earth and universe is way to complex for humans to grasp. We can learn scientific facts about how certain things work and yet when the creator does reveal himself, all the scientific facts we have learnt about the planet earth will be irrelevant.

      --
      "Failure to conform to majority belief does not make you a troll."
    40. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by bingoathome · · Score: 1

      Yeah - I stumbled on that little nugget one sleepless night - I also thought you could say that all Christians are agnostic - because ( if I understand it rightly ) they accept that you can not prove the existence of God but you must make a leap of faith to believe in God . Therefore at once agnostic and religious.

    41. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      What is quantum suicide, and why does it help resolve whether or not the many worlds hypothesis is true? Similarly, how does immortality help resolve the issue?

      Google it if you want. Basically, the idea is that you set up a machine to test a random property of a quantum state in superposition. If it detects one value, it does nothing, but if it detects the other value it kills you. If the many-worlds hypothesis is true, some copy of you will survive indefinite running of the machine, thus proving to you and anyone else who observes that either the many-worlds hypothesis is true or that you are arbitrarily lucky.

      Quantum immortality takes it one step further and assumes that anything that kills you is dependent on only the most likely outcome of collapsing a wave function, and that in some universe nothing ever kills you, your cells (or technology) manages to keep you alive despite all odds, and you become immortal.

      Either one could prove to the subject that the many-worlds hypothesis is true, but at the cost of killing the subject off in most of the other universes, or leaving them horribly maimed, and not proving anything in the universes in which they didn't survive unscathed.

      One argument suggests that for each individual, most immortality results will have relatively simple explanations; probably the most likely outcome for any given individual is to be saved essentially on their death bed by a technological singularity type of event simply because such a thing is unlikely to come in any one person's lifetime, but slightly more likely than the body spontaneously achieving the ability to live indefinitely. Similarly with quantum suicide, the most likely survivable event is the failure of the machinery or some other mundane event that interrupts the experiment. In that sense, it may actually be very difficult to prove to ones self that the many-worlds hypothesis is true.

    42. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you need scientific proof of god, your faith is pretty piss poor.

    43. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by ultraparanoid · · Score: 0

      Where's the "+1 Troll" moderator when you need it?

    44. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your writing "We scientist don't" only shows your lack of intelligence.

    45. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by db32 · · Score: 1

      Would you care to explain what testable theories have been disproven? Or even describe what a testable theory of God is?

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    46. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by m4g02 · · Score: 1

      It shows that English isn't my native language, but at least I know to speak it well enough to be understood. I can say the same for 3 different languages. Now what's your point?

      --
      Sigs are for morons... Wait a minute...
    47. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Theories about God as a motivating force for inexplicable behaviour: How does a whole human form in the womb of another human? Then a third human can form inside the second! This is a recursion problem that seems ordinary to computer types, but was dumbfounding to the ancients. One theory is that God shapes us in the womb. Another is that our children aren't actually whole, that God made Adam and Eve and that there is degradation from one generation to the next, not recursion.

      God as origin of species. Why are there different creatures, where did they come from? Were the crafted by a superbeing, each separately?

      How do the planets move? Must be God pushing them.

      All of these eventually became testable (when suitably well defined) and were disproved. Many theories of God (he gave us an immortal soul) that were not testable are becoming testable and will almost certainly be disproved.

    48. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by db32 · · Score: 1

      None of those things disprove the existence of God in any way shape or form. Nor have any of them proven that God doesn't do any of that. The difference is that anti-science and anti-religion people both take that shit so literally it is frighting.

      "God makes the plants move"
      "No he doesn't, wind does"
      "God makes the plants move by making the wind blow"
      "No he doesn't, rotational forces make the wind blow"
      "God makes the plants move by making the wind blow by making the earth spin"
      "No he doesn't gravitational forces make the earth move"
      and so on and so forth

      Personally my view of God as a superior force also includes being able to manage infinitely complex systems. My version of God is more than capable of using evolution, gravity, and all the other things we have observed about reality. The fundamentalist and atheist version of God demands a playdoh wielding child at the helm of creation. I forgive the fundies for this because they make no claim to logic, but the atheists actually claim to be the logical ones and should really see "if God is supposed to be an infinitely powerful and omnipotent force (personification or nonpersonification varies by religion) then he should be capable of doing infinitely complex things". But, nope, fundie and atheist alike demand that God is a simpleton incapable of anything that us humans can't understand at a given moment in time, they just disagree about his existence.

      That being said I think it is almost disturbing that you would relate procreation to recursion. Incidentally you left out all the life forms that actually fork to procreate.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    49. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With Uranus, we had very fine measurements

      hahahahaha... HAHAHAHA...

      I am so posting anon for this, but I laughed SO hard at that... I know, I know, juvenile. I had a long day. :)

    50. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      As an atheist, I don't demand that God be any one thing or another.

      "Personally my view of God as a superior force also includes being able to manage infinitely complex systems."

      This is what I mean when I say that all surviving theories of God (held by rational people) are not testable.

      The fundie theory has the virtue of being disproved. Your theory can't even do that.

      "That being said I think it is almost disturbing that you would relate procreation to recursion. Incidentally you left out all the life forms that actually fork to procreate."

      I wasn't the first. This was a problem faced by the ancients. They didn't see how humans could "recurse" indefinitely without divine intervention. If a man's sperm is a little homonculus, or fully formed tiny human as one "godless" theory supposed, how does the homonculus form? Where does the sperm of the son reside when he himself is only sperm? They also weren't aware of reproduction by fission.

      This problem wasn't solved until the idea of a genetic code that is distinct from the body and copied in a special process arose in the 19th century and was demonstrated in the 20th.

    51. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by db32 · · Score: 1

      Why are atheists so concerned with disproving God if they don't believe God exists and why is it always so focused on the Christian version of God? In my experience the only two groups to ever really get up in arms about exists/not exists are fundies and atheists. Both are typically equally offensive in explaining why you are so stupid to believe/not believe their story. Additionally, both seem to have a very hard time picking up humor when they feel challenged. I think it is disturbing that you relate procreation to programming concepts and further disturbed by your detailed defense of what was supposed to be a humorous remark by including the fork() concept as it relates to programming.

      My point was that God is not a scientific concept nor is it at odds in any fashion with science and falls completely outside the scope of scientific proof, theory, whatnot.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    52. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Why are atheists so concerned with disproving God if they don't believe God exists and why is it always so focused on the Christian version of God?

      I can only speak for myself, but I'm not concerned with disproving something that can't be disproved like your theory, or disproving something that's already been disproved, like the fundie theory. It is an interesting topic for discussion, but hardly a concern.

      I think it is disturbing that you relate procreation to programming concepts and further disturbed by your detailed defense of what was supposed to be a humorous remark by including the fork() concept as it relates to programming.

      I'd suspected you were a troll for acting disturbed about a software analogy on Slashdot, but if you really are disturbed, I have to wonder why. Do you find the likening of the beautiful and mysterious act of reproduction to cold, lifeless, logical programming concepts offensive, or is it something else?

      My point was that God is not a scientific concept nor is it at odds in any fashion with science and falls completely outside the scope of scientific proof, theory, whatnot.

      That's true of your concept, and you're implicitly (and correctly) rejecting all the concepts of God that did turn out to be scientific and wrong, though they dominated Western thought for Millenia.

      BTW, your particular idea of God is only beyond the realm of science for the moment, it's not inherently so.

    53. Re:Well if you can't believe in God.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Your questions suggest that your experience of atheists is restricted to people in Western democratic countries where religion plays a part in the politics.

      Why are atheists so concerned [with] the Christian version of God"?


      Politicians in Western democracies are usually Christian, sometimes Jewish, and infrequently Muslim, Sikh, Buddhist, Hindu or some other belief system -- however the electorates these non-Christian politicians face are overwhelmingly Christian by practice or by background.

      Atheists tend to see religion as a choice rather than an inherent feature passed on genetically or element of culture that cannot be abandoned as one grows up. People who choose to profess (or continue to profess) Christianity probably have much more political power where you are than others, so they are the target more often than people who choose to profess other faiths, or who reject the idea of any faith as silly.

      Silly? Well, what is your reaction to believing in a half-man/half-goat pipe-playing god, a god who was sexually interested in a goddess whose husband later beheaded him out of jealousy only to have the goddess replace the severed head with that of an elephant, a god who has always had the head of a bird, or a thinking conscious sun in the sky? These are all theistic beings with recorded histories of directly intervening in the physical world and influencing human affairs.

      How does one distinguish which set of supernatural beings is false?

  12. One question... by StandardCell · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How does this reconcile with reality as we see it?

    From my perspective, even if this mathematical "proof" is true, it is only true in the ontological sense, i.e. that these branches can happen and maybe do happen, but not in reality. Then again, I believe the entire basis for the universe is ultimately ontological but that's a different matter.

    My point is that these alternate "universes" may only exist in infinitesimally-small times (possibly below the Planck time threshold) and then simply cease to exist again as compared with our reality in the next moment, moment after moment.

    1. Re:One question... by He+Who+Waits · · Score: 1
      What causes these moments to cease to exist? Does the next moment replace the previous one?

      If so, you're saying that reality is serial, not parallel (as the Many Worlds Interpretation would suggest).

    2. Re:One question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh sure when a mathematician proves it can be done we all laugh but when the engineers/physicists figure out a way to actually travel then we get all excited. :( We mathematicians are the place kickers of the science world while the engineers and physicists are the quarterbacks and halfbacks. Whose your favorite kicker? Euler!

    3. Re:One question... by nine-times · · Score: 2, Funny

      I don't understand how you're using the word "ontology". Can you explain that some other way?

    4. Re:One question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm hung up on his use of the term "reality".

      In this context does it really mean what you think it means?

    5. Re:One question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mathematics tells one nothing about the physical universe. It is the study of the result of precise arguments given some assumptions. Different assumptions leading to different results. Any of which may or may not correspond to observations of the physical world. The models produced by science are expressed in terms of these correspondences. Until a parallel universe can be observed then its existence, proposed as an extrapolation of any mathematical model of the universe, is only slightly more compelling than the presumed existence of supernatural entities with an unhealthy interest in the reproductive lives of humans.

      As to picking a favorite mathematician, it would be difficult. Maybe Gauss. In the end it's somewhat unfair to pick any particular one based upon their work, since it's such a cumulative discipline. Who is to say what contributions any previous mathematicians might have made if they didn't have to devote their lives to building the proverbial wheel.

    6. Re:One question... by mdmkolbe · · Score: 1

      What causes these moments to cease to exist? Does the next moment replace the previous one?

      <hand_wave>
      Conservation of energy *mumble* parallel universes living on borrowed time/energy due to the Heisenberg uncertainty principal *shuffle* clouds of virtual universes collapse back into the universe we know as Reality.
      </hand_wave>

      (Yes, I know this is wrong and there are a dozen counter arguments. Not the least of which is that I'm probably mixing different branches of Quantum Mechanics. But it still sounds more plausible than most of the Science Fiction/Popular Science News out there so I couldn't resist.)

    7. Re:One question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are asking how we can SEE this?

      Smoke .40 grams of Saliva Divinorum 40x potency. Do this while it's still legal.

      You will then SEE the world in a way which mentally proves the Many Worlds theory. The indigenous peoples of Mexico have used it for thousands of years now.

  13. OT: near miss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A motorist who has a near miss, for instance, might feel relieved at his lucky escape. This term has always bothered me. If something is a "near miss," doesn't that imply that they actually hit?
    1. Re:OT: near miss by _14k4 · · Score: 1

      We, in the fire department (when driving our elevated platform aroudn town), use the phrase, "A miss is as good as a mile." Especially as an answer to the question, "Did you come close to that telephone-poll/car/sign?" :P

    2. Re:OT: near miss by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      Not really. It's convetionally interpreted as "It was a miss, but a near thing." And convention generally trumps nitpickers. :)

      You *can* use "near hit" and I believe the safety industry actually uses the two interchangeably. It might be one of those glass half full or half empty situations.

      But it boils down to what it really was. Was it a hit or a miss, and what kind of hit or miss.

      Here's how *I* would put it:
      Near miss: Objects miss, but it was close.
      Near hit: Objects collided in glancing blow.
      Distant miss: Objects missed, we're not close, but maybe it's something to look into.
      Distant hit: meaningless

      And then there's:
      Direct hit: Bang on target!
      Direct miss: Meaningless outside of satire, :)

  14. Right from wrong. by He+Who+Waits · · Score: 1

    I don't believe this. On the other hand, I do.

    1. Re:Right from wrong. by thatskinnyguy · · Score: 1

      The word you are looking for is paradox.

      --
      The game.
  15. Raises the question by dsanfte · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one?

    --
    occultae nullus est respectus musicae - originally a Greek proverb
    1. Re:Raises the question by mfender9 · · Score: 1

      Because in all of the others, you are not posing this question.

    2. Re:Raises the question by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

      We need a gate to get to them and the last time we opened one we took out a big part of the power grid to open it. Now we use ZPM's and NAQUADAH GENERATOR's to open them.

    3. Re:Raises the question by cromar · · Score: 1

      The particles that make up our being only "exist" in this dimension, to put it loosely. Ourselves in the other dimensions experience those dimensions, if indeed there are multiple dimensions.

    4. Re:Raises the question by Teresita · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because in all of the others, you are not posing this question.

      You got it 180 degrees out. The answer is the equivalent, but the reverse, of the Anthropic Principle. Every parallel universe also has copies of him asking that same question.

    5. Re:Raises the question by EvilSpudBoy · · Score: 2, Informative

      If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one?

      Because you are in this one. If you were in a different one you would wonder the same thing.

      That's the anthropic principle.

    6. Re:Raises the question by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How would you compare universes to be able to differentiate between them? How can you say which one you are experiencing? There is no "control universe" you can step back into.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    7. Re:Raises the question by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 1

      I think what it is saying is our universe split like cells, at LEAST at every point you make a quantum measurement. You don't exist in a single universe, per se, but rather a long string of universes you used to be in, up to the point of the one you are in now.
       
      So maybe underneath, this says something about what time really is.

      --

      "When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
    8. Re:Raises the question by He+Who+Waits · · Score: 1
      One possibility is that Time's Arrow runs backwards, resolving a massive cosmic nest of wave functions (existing some time in the future) down into a singularity (existing some time in the past), and what we experience as Now is just the wavefront of that collapse.

      Or not.

    9. Re:Raises the question by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one?

      It's only *us* experiencing this one.

      We're punished for something, I just know it.

    10. Re:Raises the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one?
      Because all your experience is just a set of of electro-chemical reactions. Your "experience" is just the result of stimuli from this universe.
      By the same token, we existed in the past, and exist in the future, but only "experience" the present.
    11. Re:Raises the question by owlstead · · Score: 1

      If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one? I could answer you, but I'm afraid it is equally likely that you are the one that doesn't receive my answer, so I won't.
    12. Re:Raises the question by Surt · · Score: 1

      How do you know you're only experiencing one universe? What if you're experiencing billions of universes and interpreting it as one for the sake of convenience?

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    13. Re:Raises the question by Fex303 · · Score: 1

      Because you are in this one. If you were in a different one you would wonder the same thing.

      Except in the one where, by an unlikely spontaneous quantum event, the OP's head just exploded.

    14. Re:Raises the question by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you're asking the exact same question in a whole bunch of other universes...

      Maybe since once a quantum "decision" is made, there is no more communication possible between the different states. Our consciousness rides along both paths, but has no way of knowing about the others.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    15. Re:Raises the question by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      Crud. That actually kinda made sense to me. I don't get why we would experience it going the other direction, though.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    16. Re:Raises the question by pclminion · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My theory is that we actually ARE experiencing parallel universes. But the pressures of biological evolution have driven us toward brain structures which hide this fact. Maybe we actually ARE spread out across many different possibilities, but our conscious view of reality is as a single whole. Why? Because it made survival easier, perhaps. Or maybe, individuals with parallel awareness inevitably go insane and die out. Who knows.

      Sometimes this parallelism "leaks through," in the form of quantum strangeness. But it's not the universe which is strange, it's actually us. Our brains contradict reality by trying to condense everything and the result is "weird" physics. Is the electron here, or there? Maybe it's both, but our brains decide to interpret it as a concrete one-way-or-the-other, because doing otherwise would require us to be consciously aware of all of reality, something which is probably impossible.

    17. Re:Raises the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      42

    18. Re:Raises the question by njchick · · Score: 1

      More specifically, why do we only experience the universe with random outcomes? We could be in the universe where every outcome in some experiment would be the same, e.g. all photons are found to be left polarized and all free neutrons live exactly 15 minutes. However, we see fairly random statistical distribution of all quantum effects we observe. So, where's the source of the randomness?

    19. Re:Raises the question by Pedrito · · Score: 1

      If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one?

      I don't understand why so many people responded to the initial poster of this question. He left our universe shortly after he wrote this.

    20. Re:Raises the question by qbwiz · · Score: 1

      That is in fact the point of the Many Worlds interpretation. You only observe the universe you're in, because you're only in the universe you're in. Why would you expect to be able to determine anything about a universe that you're not in, even if it had, at some point, branched off of yours?

      --
      Ewige Blumenkraft.
    21. Re:Raises the question by kebes · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'm not sure if you were already aware, but there is indeed a concept called "Quantum Darwinism" which helps explain (using the results from quantum decoherence) why we observe things "classically" (single outcomes of experiments, non-entangled macroscopic states, etc.) despite the universe being fundamentally quantum.

      Briefly, the theory shows (rigorously) how pseudo-classical states are the only ones that are robust against decoherence. Hence, those are the states that tend to persists for measurable periods of time. And those pseudo-classical states are the ones that give rise to other pseudo-classical states.

      Moreover the main developer of these ideas (Wojciech Zurek) describes in his papers how what we typically term "memories" are inherently classical states (it's either "a" or "b"--not a superposition of both). He explains how macroscopic states will tend to be pseudo-classical, so of course any biological (macroscopic) creature will evolve to assume that reality is classical (it's an adaptive advantage and a good approximation of reality).

      The point is that these larger-scale superpositions do indeed exist, but that local observers (e.g. instruments, or ants, or humans) can inherently only record/remember classical states, not quantum ones. So, our perception of reality (and memory of reality) is inherently a classical one.

    22. Re:Raises the question by aztektum · · Score: 1

      would require us to be consciously aware of all of reality, something which is probably impossible.

      I thought that's what LSD was for?
      --
      :: aztek ::
      No sig for you!!
    23. Re:Raises the question by InvisblePinkUnicorn · · Score: 1

      "if indeed there are multiple dimensions."

      I'm not sure what point-like world you live in, but I'm in the 3-dimensional world here.

    24. Re:Raises the question by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      That question is one of the easier ones, but if you drop the word "only" it becomes harder. There's a concept called decoherence. The early interpretation of the story where Schrodinger's cat exists in a superposition of a live and dead state is no longer acceptable. The interaction with the rest of the universe, and a bit of background radiation is already enough, lead very quickly(and you can calculate how quickly) to a state of universe+dead cat or universe+live cat. The weird mixed quantum states cancel out, effectively reducing the system to one of classical probabilities. So you can only experience one universe. The cat will either be live or dead, no in betweens.

      The conservative interpretation is that quantum mechanics is still a probabilistic theory, not deterministic. There is one world, not many. There is not even a collapse of the wave function. The cat will be either live or dead, 50% each and you can't predict which one.
      But a lot of people have been attracted towards deterministic interpretations, and enter the many worlds interpretation. Now the wave function becomes the reality and the indeterminacy is shifted towards which path we follow in the branching tree of realities.

      Most people think they are getting a good deal from that tradeoff. Then some start piling on more stuff, adding a "consciousness field" to make the choices at the branches. That's hoping they can solve one problem with another problem. Could be nice.

      I don't think we're getting a good deal here. Obviously.

    25. Re:Raises the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because you touch yourself at night

    26. Re:Raises the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point is that these larger-scale superpositions do indeed exist, but that local observers (e.g. instruments, or ants, or humans) can inherently only record/remember classical states, not quantum ones. So, our perception of reality (and memory of reality) is inherently a classical one.

      That makes no sense to me. But of course, you'll just argue that it makes no sense to me because I have a classical brain which can't understand it... But then again, that makes it a bad theory. :-P
    27. Re:Raises the question by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one?

      If you are a human like I am, why do I only experience my experiences and not yours?
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    28. Re:Raises the question by jayegirl · · Score: 1

      Erm, the pertinent point is that we *remember* this one: the alternative versions of you equally remember the histories appropriate to them.

    29. Re:Raises the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm going to pretend you didn't say that.

    30. Re:Raises the question by noidentity · · Score: 1

      "If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one?"

      Because this experience is what comes along with the universe that followed this path. In the many-worlds interpretation, there would probably be another universe in which you had a different experience and are also asking the same question. I don't grasp what's compelling about your question.

    31. Re:Raises the question by BarfBits · · Score: 1

      Superposition through multiverses is bunk. Let's do a gedanken experiment using a
      "movable" observer rather than a "local" observer. Let's say a camera follows a
      particle going through an infinite number of slits. If the camera ever ends on the
      left side of a slit, then it turns OFF automatically. As I understand the theory,
      we could end up with a camera that remains ON forever -- a predictable right
      turning universe, which would violate the uncertainty principle. In fact, we could
      have an infinite number of universes with predictable patterns.
      OK, so you try to rehabilitate the theory by reinforcing the uncertainty principle.
      Let's say that once a regular pattern is observed after N slits by our movable
      camera, that universe collapses into oblivion. What happens to the potentially
      branched universes that breaks the pattern after N+1 observations?

    32. Re:Raises the question by jafuser · · Score: 1

      If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one?

      One possible explanation: you are the sum of your experiences.

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    33. Re:Raises the question by porpnorber · · Score: 1

      If there are an infinite number of parallel universes for each possible quantum outcome, why do we only experience -this- one?

      Because Wherever you go, there you are.

      Seriously.

    34. Re:Raises the question by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      As I understand the theory, we could end up with a camera that remains ON forever

      Right. That's possible, but would only occur in a very, very small number of the universes.

      a predictable right turning universe, which would violate the uncertainty principle.

      Not really - they'll never be able to tell if they're in an "always right" universe or a "first N to the right, then something different" universe. Just because the first ten rolls of a particular die are sixes, that doesn't mean that the rules of die rolling are broken.

      Superposition through multiverses is bunk.

      Well, if your argument turns out to be correct, it would work equally well against any explanation of quantum mechanics that includes actual randomness.

  16. Another version of this post in an parallel uni. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An +5 insightful +5 funny post should be posted here.

  17. So this universe by techpawn · · Score: 1

    Would it have senile felines? You know like schrodinger's cat!

    --
    Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what your country did to you
    1. Re:So this universe by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Schroedinger's cat may or may not have died of old age by now, depending on whether or not it survived the initial box/gassing experience. Somewhere in Vienna near Schroedinger's house, there is a gravesite which may or may not contain cat bones.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  18. or... by thatskinnyguy · · Score: 1

    Or perhaps instead of having parallel universes, it's all one universe with segments separated by space/time. Of course we are a long way off from truly understanding this universal paradox.

    On another note, why are scientists wasting their time with this when Sliders solved this mystery for us over a decade ago?!

    --
    The game.
  19. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by trolltalk.com · · Score: 3, Funny

    Think about the "mind-body problem" Okay ...

    I did ... and here's my solution. Basically, there are other branches where life sucks less, and others where life suck more, etc. I'm going to find the one where life sucks less and kill my alter ego so I can take their place!!!!!!!! (Of course, that means that there's ANOTHER me in an even suckier universe gunning for me, so better be quick!)

    You'd better watch out - there may be a doppelganger of you looking to do the same thing...

  20. Look, just let me know when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the final count of parallel universes is calculated, so that I can finally create my multiverse transporter and kill myself in all parallel universes, thus making me the all powerful...

  21. circular dependency by u19925 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is a circular dependency here. The author assumes that the parallel universe interpretation is correct and then argues that if this interpretation is correct, then we can derive probabilistic nature of quantum of mechanics. All this means is that the parallel universe is a self-consistent theory. Nobody has argued against this for the last 50+ years.

    The problem with quantum mechanics interpretation is that as of now, no interpretation exists which is not bizarre in our traditional world view. Parallel universe is just one of them.

    1. Re:circular dependency by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      The author assumes that the parallel universe interpretation is correct

            Ahh, but the parallel universe interpretation HAS to be correct because the mere fact that we think it's possible collapses the quantum waveforms and MAKES it possible - see?

            You are arguing about circular references in a circular, ok sorry "quantum", field...?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:circular dependency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think that MW is consistent, so I am very curious to see what they've done here.

      AFAIK, many-worlds requires a rather metaphysical "measure of reality" to be placed on the various universes; I am unaware that this has ever been satisfactorily explained.

    3. Re:circular dependency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with quantum mechanics interpretation is that as of now, no interpretation exists which is not bizarre in our traditional world view. Parallel universe is just one of them. Actually the idea that our universe is simulated in a 'computer' of sorts makes a lot of sense and explains all sorts of quantum mechanics. Our universe may in fact have teleportation and 18 dimensions, or whatever they are saying these days. Or it may just be an imperfect simulation using lazy evalutation and monti carlo.
    4. Re:circular dependency by Manchot · · Score: 1

      That may be true, but all physics has progressed in the same way. In fact, what you're complaining about is the essence of why physicists cannot truly write "proofs." When developing new theories, all you can hope to do it show that it encompasses the old theory and (hopefully) is more illuminating than it.

      For example:
      1. Newton's Law of Gravitation predicted that planets obeyed the rules of epicycles, but had far more explanatory power.
      2. Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics predicted Newton's Laws, but allowed them to be more easily applied to more complicated systems, such as electromagnetic ones.
      3. Gauss's Law for electric fields correctly predicts Coulomb's Law, but can be applied to more systems. Ampere's law (sans displacement current) correctly predicts the Biot-Savart Law. Maxwell's equations (with the displacement current) predict all the other prior observations, and showed that the speed of electromagnetic radiation was the same as the speed of light.
      4. General relativity predicted classical mechanics, but was better able to describe fast, heavy things.
      5. Quantum mechanics predicted classical mechanics in the other limit, but was better able to describe small, light things.
      6. Quantum field theory predicts quantum mechanics, but is better able to describe fields.

      And now, these physicists are saying that the many-worlds interpretation correctly predicts quantum mechanics. At the same time, it solves the measurement problem, so if it is true, it is better able to describe the universe than quantum mechanics (which is, as it stands, logically inconsistent). This in no way diminishes the accomplishment made, in the same way that the accomplishments of Newton, Lagrange, Hamilton, Gauss, Ampere, Maxwell, Einstein, Schroedinger, Heisenberg, Dirac, and Feynman are not diminished by their method.

    5. Re:circular dependency by OriginalArlen · · Score: 1

      Paging David Deutsch! You're an idiot; you must be, u19925 says so on Slashdot.

      --

      Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
    6. Re:circular dependency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The author assumes that the parallel universe interpretation is correct and then argues that if this interpretation is correct, then we can derive probabilistic nature of quantum of mechanics.

      The author did not "argue" anything; he didn't make any argument or assumption what so ever. If you read TFA, the author was a merely a journalist attempting to report and explain (badly) something he was told. The physicist responsible told him they had mathematically derived the quantum probability function FROM the many worlds hypothesis. The alternate physicist he did his fact checking with (the Berkeley P h.D.) told him it would be really important. I realize many people can't tell the difference between a scientist and reporter, but please, do try.

  22. Oh great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So now we don't even know what universe were in? Well it better be universe A damn it!

  23. Can it be true? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The explanation is hardly paractical one. Mathematics is good at imaging imaginary universes. For example, it could plausible theory
    that something which we can't see disappears or clone itself and then reassembles just before our eyes. Perhaps quantum universe just contain
    enough inobservability to think we have multiple (and still multiplying) solutions to the "equation of the Universe".

    Even if done right, mathematics explains nothing unless it prooves that solution found is the only possible one. Consider the following equation in natural numbers:

    1 + x + y + z + 5 = 15

    What is the solution to that? I've just discovered that x=2, y=3, z=4. It explains a lot of oddities we had.

  24. We Need Space by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1

    the bush-like branching structure created by the universe splitting into parallel versions of itself can explain the probabilistic nature of quantum outcomes.

    But where are we putting all of them?

    What is the name of the space that contains Universes?

    Quit making so may decisions/observations lest we run out of space for all the different outcomes.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:We Need Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is the name of the space that contains Universes? everyone knows it's called Ultraspace
    2. Re:We Need Space by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      But where are we putting all of them?
      Unfortunately, once you stop talking about the four dimensions we're actually familiar with or the universe we live in, concepts like "where" become kinda meaningless.
      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    3. Re:We Need Space by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 1

      But where are we putting all of them?

      What is the name of the space that contains Universes?

      They're all in the same space. That's what "superposition" means.
      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    4. Re:We Need Space by charlieo88 · · Score: 1

      Which is why we need to move to IPv6.

    5. Re:We Need Space by jafuser · · Score: 1

      What is the name of the space that contains Universes?

      The multiverse?

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
  25. bush-like branching structure ? by mozkill · · Score: 1

    well, it sounds like a proof based off an invalid assumption. the first assumption of "bush-like branching structure" needs to be proved first, and it isn't. how could it be?

    --

    -- Betting on the survival of the media industry is a serious risk. I advise investing elsewhere.
  26. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by Xtravar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Life is like a dream. You never die in your dreams. You never die in your observed life. You just die in alternate universes. This carries on until you reach the next plane of intelligence (wake up) whereupon you realize that there was no mind-body problem to begin with.

    Fixed!

    --
    Buckle your ROFL belt, we're in for some LOLs.
  27. Oh great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yet more abstract and unintuitive maths goes into propping up theoretical physics. I majored in maths but even so I can't see us making progress 'till we really *understand* this quantum shit. And that means intuitive explainations please people.

  28. There Is No Chance by yakmans_dad · · Score: 1

    So, after every quantum time interval there are 2^(number of quanta in the universe) new universes being created. Each with an identical number of quanta in the exact location of the universe it split from. And this has been happening ever since Time began.

    That's a lot of universes. You'd think that in one of them I could [fill in the blank].

    1. Re:There Is No Chance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh you have, just not in this one.

    2. Re:There Is No Chance by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Not quite. Collapse of superposed states only occurs during measurement (and potentially, only part of the wavefunction collapses upon measurement). While measurement is very clearly defined in laboratory experiments, it's less clearly-defined in general. Multiple quantum objects can form a superposed state together (entanglement), "awaiting measurement", as it were. There's no real distinct "quantum time interval" to apply here. Additionally, the decisions aren't necessarily binary. Quantum computers are great for discussing this. I could construct a two-qbit quantum computer and put it in an state where, when the qbits are measured, there's a 10% chance of measuring 00, a 30% chance of measuring 01, and a 60% chance of measuring 11 (no chance of measuring 10). That's 3 possible states, and not of even weight. Better, I can construct superposed states where the possible measured quantities are a continuum (fancy, more appropriate term for "infinite"). Like if the position of a particle is between 0 and 1, with probability exp(-x)*e/(e-1) (I think that's properly normalized). Collapsing this wavefunction should then produce a continuum of alternate universes?

      Generally in the many-worlds model, these separate universes are considered entirely distinct -- no "traveling" between them as if they have some level of reality in "your" universe's space and time. In this case, it seems entirely metaphysical -- which means that it just doesn't matter in terms of actual science.

    3. Re:There Is No Chance by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >Collapse of superposed states only occurs during measurement

      And really, just like the cat, you only join the superposition. Say you're in a locked room making the measurement and haven't communicated it to anyone outside the room, that wave has only collapsed for you. As far as the rest of the universe is concerned, you're in both states.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    4. Re:There Is No Chance by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      That sounds either wrong or mostly metaphysical. On the other hand, it would clarify the bit about what "measurement" means somewhat. An observer (the entity performing the measurement) can never been in a superposed state, from the observer's perspective. An outside entity might consider the observer to now be entangled with the system it observed. I don't recall quantum mechanics enough to say much about that.

    5. Re:There Is No Chance by GregariousBoson · · Score: 1

      At the risk of being redundant, this seems to generalize to the entire universe. If the universe is really just one giant many-body wavefunction, it just evolves completely deterministically under Schroedinger's equation (or some future upgraded version with support for gravity) indefinitely with nothing to ever measure it. No more need for many worlds.

  29. 1 = 2? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Where does the energy come from to give existence to this second universe? This whole splitting of the universe thing seems common in physics, so I'm sure I'm not interpreting this correctly. It seems like there's entire universes being created because of the uncertainty of a single particle.

    1. Re:1 = 2? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      Actually, the energy gets divided which is why I am so tired. Either that or it is Monday.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    2. Re:1 = 2? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      It's always Monday in some parallel universe. Maybe Mondays leak across universes like superstring gravity.

    3. Re:1 = 2? by xZgf6xHx2uhoAj9D · · Score: 1

      Whenever I hear about things, I always think of it in terms of simulating a universe in a computer. After all, our universe (or group of universes) could be nothing more than a computer simulation, right? And it helps me think about things in that way.

      So you are God and you're writing the code to simulate the universe. You've carefully set up your laws of physics such that matter and energy are always conserved from one moment in time (I'm reticent to use the word "quantum" in this context) to the next. However, when it comes to coding up your quantum simulation and spawn off multiple universes, there's really no reason to preserve energy. It's not even a useful context to preserve energy across a split of universes. So you would quite literally duplicate your data structures. All of the matter and energy is duplicated. If a person happened to be living in one of those universes (the one you split or the one you created), he wouldn't be any the wiser. It's not like he has access to the energy in the other universe.

      So, like I said, you would just duplicate your data structures. The would be identical (and maybe even share some references for efficiency's sake), except for one single datum, which would be a 0 in one universe and a 1 in the other. Probably before long, both universes would become isomorphic, and they would get merged back together, with all the data structures you just duplicated getting garbage collected.

      If a coder can do it, so can God.

      It does also demonstrate the "non-economical sense" of the many-worlds interpretation. Maybe God is sharing references between universes, like I said. Hopefully he's utilizing some sort of copy-on-write semantics as well to avoid costly copy operations :)

    4. Re:1 = 2? by xRelisH · · Score: 1

      I have some background in Quantum Physics, but the way I would theorize (i.e guess) how this might work in terms of parallel universes is to imagine the set of universes being represented by an infinite state machine, with transitions being driven by observations.

    5. Re:1 = 2? by dasunt · · Score: 1

      Where does the energy come from to give existence to this second universe? This whole splitting of the universe thing seems common in physics, so I'm sure I'm not interpreting this correctly. It seems like there's entire universes being created because of the uncertainty of a single particle.

      As opposed to the universe as a whole, who was created by the energy of God 6,000 years ago? ;-)

    6. Re:1 = 2? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously the amount of energy in each universe is the same. Energy wouldn't be required for the multiple worlds to get "created"--it would merely be a number that is equal across each branch just like it is from a past to future. Consider that even when there is a superposition in one universe, energy is conserved.

    7. Re:1 = 2? by Goldsmith · · Score: 1

      What you describe (having multiple data structures pointing to almost the same set of data, changing a reference and then re-merging data structures) is a much better analogy for the way quantum mechanics works than many-worlds.

      But... if you want to test it out on any other physicists, you may want to clarify that you don't care about energy conservation on a small time scale (which is in physics).

    8. Re:1 = 2? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      And if I *don't* buy into the universe=simulation theory? ...

      All I can come up with is that there were an infinite number of parallels created at the Big Bang (or D-brane collision, if you like), all exactly the same, and they begin to diverge from there.

      But that requires INFINITE energy at the point of creation, and from what I have read to date, physicists don't really like infinite answers and other singularities. In fact, that's one of the attractions of string theory: it smooths over a lot of things that previous theories gave infinites for.

    9. Re:1 = 2? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hamsters in treadmill boxes.

    10. Re:1 = 2? by porpnorber · · Score: 1

      Where does the energy come from to give existence to this second universe? This whole splitting of the universe thing seems common in physics, so I'm sure I'm not interpreting this correctly. It seems like there's entire universes being created because of the uncertainty of a single particle.

      I think you have the pieces inside-out. I might just as well ask 'where does the energy come from to create the past?' If I move into the future, the past is implicitly destroyed, and vice versa; energy is conserved, not summed, across changed in the time coordinate. Moving forwards into a universe fork is just moving into the future; energy is conserved, not summed, across the transition. Since any two universes in the same multiverse are connected by a series of forward and backward transitions, energy is conserved in exactly the expected way.

      In fact, universes are behaving as the units of conservation, which makes sense, since they are the (maximal) units of observation.

      (Having said that, I occasionally wake up in the middle of the night wondering, e.g., whether conservation laws between universes might not be responsible for entropy, by constraining the available time axes. But that's my own problem, not yours!)

    11. Re:1 = 2? by khallow · · Score: 1

      (Having said that, I occasionally wake up in the middle of the night wondering, e.g., whether conservation laws between universes might not be responsible for entropy, by constraining the available time axes. But that's my own problem, not yours!)

      Given that it would be an inherited property of universes, I imagine it is our problem as well.
    12. Re:1 = 2? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      >>> I might just as well ask 'where does the energy come from to create the past?'

      Not sure how that is equivalent. It's a universe of matter and energy with a flow of time. Looking strictly at one universe, the universe of the past is not a different universe and neither is the universe of the future. The idea that the universe is destroyed and recreated with every moment seems to me to be more of a philosophical concept.

      What the article seemed to be saying is that a whole different universe comes into being because some particle can be in different places. The only way I can see that is if [1] the infinitude of parallels preexist, and that until that particle decision the two universes in question were identical or [2] the branching is a highly localized effect.

    13. Re:1 = 2? by porpnorber · · Score: 1

      I think this is a terminological problem. In the sense that the universe of the past is not a different universe from the universe of the present, the universe of the left fork is not a different universe from the universe of the right fork; they both share the same past, and so are both in the same domain of conservation. Conversely, in the sense of 'different universe' that is meant by the model, the past is a different universe, too (albeit one that will evolve into the present, while it happens that a parallel present [in general] won't).

      But as a matter of fact time is not so oriented anyway. Both relativistically and quantum mechanically you are allowed, in physical theory, to rotate things so that the line between 'past' and 'future' shifts (the reasons that this does not violate conservation laws are seemingly different in the two cases, though). What this means is that you can draw a sheet, as it were, across the evolving multiverse to select out a universe, and the conservation laws say that the overall statistics for each such sheet are the same. The many worlds hypothesis, at this level, just says that it takes more than a single parameter t to name such a sheet, which isn't such a big leap, to my way of thinking.

    14. Re:1 = 2? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      You ever get the feeling sometimes that the Universe is not fully comprehensible to any being living within it? :-) There's an Unknowability Theory out there just waiting for the Nobel.

    15. Re:1 = 2? by porpnorber · · Score: 1

      Actually there is a lot of work to be done in playing out Goedel's work in different domains, I'm sure of it. The nature of consciousness, the free will issue, the rationality of theology—these all hinge on the same question of what happens when the system sets out to model itself. Thinking about the structure of the universe, or what it means to observe it, while living inside it is quite a dodgy proposition.

      But it's worse than just just pushing through the maths, because mathematical logic itself doesn't appear to be uniquely determined, even from our local perspective.

      It's all quite interesting to think about, but it's truly and provably metaphysics! I don't think there's a Nobel prize for metaphysics.

    16. Re:1 = 2? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, however it's turned on its head to say the unobserved choices are moved out of the light cone of the entire universe, and then relativized, so that the unobserved choice and the combination of the observed choice and observer are in separate and causally disconnected universes.

      The pruning out of no-longer-possible futures is accomplished at the time of causal interaction (observation), but the partitioning occurs some time before that (event). In other words, two independent subsystems are entangled into a single system at the time of observation -- once that has happened, the two systems are no longer indepenendent and their states must be considered relative to one another.

      That's all MWI/RSF + QM is - a description of "causal contagion" bounded by c.

  30. So why is it by Anonimouse · · Score: 0

    i'm always in the universe where XP crashes? By rights i should also see XP perform smoothly and securely but that doesn't happen. Ever. I say bullshit!

  31. Where is the paper? by kmac06 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I would very much like to find the publication of this, or least more details given by the authors if anyone can fine a link.

    By the way, Deutsch is a well known physicist, not some crackpot. One of the first problems discovered to be theoretically sped up by a quantum computer is named after him (link).

    1. Re:Where is the paper? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There was a conference on "Many worlds at 50" this past weekend at the Perimeter Institute in Waterloo, Ontario. I'm guessing that the most relevant presentation is "Probability in the Everett interpretation: state of play" by David Wallace.

      Here's the talk's abstract: "I will review the current state of the probability problem. My main focus will be on the attempts by David Deutsch and myself to provide a proof of the Born Rule starting from Everettian assumptions, but I will also attempt to locate these attempts within the more general framework of the probability problem."

      The talk can be viewed here.

  32. omgz i made the number trees line up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    dear researchers (read: ill-informed mathematicians & faux-losophers):

    many worlds is the answer to a question that didn't need asking. why assume that superposition means that each state is uniquely there and existing, like a huge OR statement?

    look. we get it, it's weird. a particle can't "spin" both ways. the cat can't be alive or dead. it makes your brain hurt, and keeps you up at night.

    but you know what? i don't care. neither does reality. it's going to just keep on being whatever it is. and as far as we can tell, that is: things behave like waves. then we observe them, and they behave like particles.

    why are you worried about the other possible states? you're just making a philosophical assumption, that they were there to begin with. just accept the fact that things can behave according to probabilistic models, and we can all get on with our lives.

    1. Re:omgz i made the number trees line up! by brunascle · · Score: 1

      in other words, why should we try to understand the universe? i dont know, because we want to. does that question really need to be answered?

    2. Re:omgz i made the number trees line up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sorry, i was a little vague there. what i meant is not that the question of "why" shouldn't be asked (of course it should be), but that, in the case of the collapse of the wave function, in order to ask that question, you have to make huge assumptions about the reality of that function.

      assuming that all of the states in the superposition have an independent reality, allows you make up all sorts of crazy philosophy, but does it get us anywhere? to me, assuming the reality of the wave function, to the point where its collapse seems like a paradox, smacks of an old-fashioned mind-set.

      not that we'd be in terrible company. einstein's major beef with QM was disproved by real experiments. if only we all could be as dumb as albert einstein!

      holding out for hidden variables, trying to keep locality intact...it just doesn't jive with me. why twist your brain into a pretzel trying to preserve something that can't be backed up in the lab? and arguing about the collapse of a function that may or may not be real, or subjective in one or another sense, etc etc, seems no better than trying to figure out whether then sun orbits the earth, or vice versa, when the most accurate AND elegant model makes it clear that the question is dumb in the first place. there is movement between them, and to arbitrarily decide one is stationary is a waste of time.

      it's all my opinion though. but i get pretty pissed off at how all these many-worlds guys are so damn sure of themselves.

    3. Re:omgz i made the number trees line up! by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 1

      and as far as we can tell, that is: things behave like waves. then we observe them, and they behave like particles.
      Wow. There's very little you could have said to better illustrate your complete incomprehension not only of the physics involved, but of the observations behind the physics.

      Things on the subatomic level behave like waves and they behave like particles at the same time. The wave-nature of light wasn't something Maxwell just pulled out of his ass one day; it's readily observable even without any equipment more complicated than a pinhole or two. The particle nature of light is less obvious: you do need special equipment and a whole new theoretical structure to observe and understand the photon. Without the experiments that require qm to explain them, there's no need at all to postulate that light occurs in quanta. The really weird behavior here happens when you think you're observing particles, but it turns out they're behaving as if they were all part of the same wave. Read up on the double-slit experiment someday.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    4. Re:omgz i made the number trees line up! by m50d · · Score: 1
      why are you worried about the other possible states? you're just making a philosophical assumption, that they were there to begin with. just accept the fact that things can behave according to probabilistic models, and we can all get on with our lives.

      Erm, no. The other states must have been there, otherwise we wouldn't observe an interference pattern in the one-photon-at-a-time double split experiment.

      --
      I am trolling
    5. Re:omgz i made the number trees line up! by Chapter80 · · Score: 1
      The same types of questions could have been asked through the centuries of discoveries in physics. Example: We know about the theory of electrons. Why measure it? Why worry about it? Answer: Because if we can understand it, while we may not be able to "control it" (as in change its behavior), we can utilize it to our advantage.

      Same thing for Newtonian physics. And Astronomy, and physics of planets. (Why worry about what the sun or moon is going to do? You can't change it! - YEAH, but you CAN learn, and then launch a satellite or two thousand, and change our very communications infrastructure.

  33. Occam's razor by Biff+Stu · · Score: 4, Funny

    So they say they have a mathematical description of the parallel universe theory. One can construct a mathematical model that describes the geocentric solar system perfectly well, but the the heliocentric version is much simpler.

    So, which is simpler?

    (1) Shit happens.

    (2) Shit happens. Parallel universes are created.

    1. Re:Occam's razor by MontyApollo · · Score: 1

      Actually, I believe it would be something more like

      (1) "Observation" somehow collapses the wave function and creates reality. Shit happens.

      (2) Shit happens. Parallel universes are created.

    2. Re:Occam's razor by Surt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Occam's razor proves nothing (and is often wrong!). Phrase the question differently, which is simpler:

      We're in the only universe, which just happens to be perfectly suited and tuned to our existence.
      There's an infinite number of universes, and we're in one where we're possible.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    3. Re:Occam's razor by MyLongNickName · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Occam's razor is useless in situations like this. Basically Occam's razor comes down to a judgment call. 'Which "sounds more plausible"? 'is the question that is asked. To be honest when you get into this branch of physics, even things that have been damn well proven and the knowledge used to build workable devices... the concepts STILL sound impossible.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    4. Re:Occam's razor by hanssprudel · · Score: 5, Interesting

      So, which is simpler?

      (1) Shit happens.

      (2) Shit happens. Parallel universes are created. That isn't the choice. It is more like:

      (1) (Copenhagen) The act of "observing" a particle at some point between the particle, the measuring apparatus, and your mind, somehow magically causes the particle to collapse from a wave state to a fixed one, without any other action on your part. Nobody has ever explained exactly what an observation is (we are, after all, made of particles too) nor when this happens.

      (2) (Multiple worlds) Reality consists of particles in quantum waves of superimposed states. Period. When we observe a particles state, it's state becomes entangled with the state of the particles in our mind, and hence we observe the particle as collapsing to a single state "in each world".

      I don't know about everybody else, but the fact that all states can exist, yet I can only perceive them separately, is no stranger to me than that all moments of time exist, yet I can only perceive each one separately.
    5. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Many Worlds is simpler, in the sense that it does not require a separate rule of discontinuous collapse. It is a generalization of entanglement (a phenomenon already recognized in Copenhagen interpretation) to all quantum events - "collapse" is just an extreme case of essentially irreversible entanglement.

      Calling it "Many Worlds" was a great PR blunder. Something like "generalized superposition interpretation" would make more sense. Everett called it "Coherent state."

      The problem with Many Worlds, as far as I know, is that it is a deterministic theory which takes no account of the probabilistic nature of QM. To fix this, you need to bring in a "measure of reality," which is ill-defined and can not be well-defined IMO.

    6. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got it all wrong. The options are:

      (1) Shit happens. Whatever you decide to label a measurement is somehow special and needs different treatment from anything else.

      (2) Shit happens. Parallel universes are created.

      (3) A method of defining (1) so that it is isomorphic to (2) exists. Shit happens.

    7. Re:Occam's razor by hanssprudel · · Score: 1

      The problem with Many Worlds, as far as I know, is that it is a deterministic theory which takes no account of the probabilistic nature of QM. To fix this, you need to bring in a "measure of reality," which is ill-defined and can not be well-defined IMO. Right. Explaining probability in terms of multiple-worlds is exactly what the researcher cited in the article claims to have done.
    8. Re:Occam's razor by kylben · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or how about: There's only one universe, and we are what happened to be possible in it. The odds of winning the lottery are tens of millions to one. The chance that someone will win the lottery is 100%.

      --
      Insightful and funny are really the same thing, except one has a punch line.
    9. Re:Occam's razor by genner · · Score: 1

      To be honest when you get into this branch of physics, even things that have been damn well proven and the knowledge used to build workable devices... the concepts STILL sound impossible.

      Yeah religion has the same problem with Occam's razor.

    10. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I'll believe it when I see it. The problem is not a particularly subtle or difficult one, as far as I can tell - it is simply impossible to deal with, unless you hide some rather absurd assumptions in your formalism. I predict that this paper hides some rather absurd assumptions (I have not read it yet).

    11. Re:Occam's razor by irenaeous · · Score: 1
      Or how about: There's only one universe, and we are what happened to be possible in it. The odds of winning the lottery are tens of millions to one. The chance that someone will win the lottery is 100%.

      A qualification -- If you are running a lottery, but there is only one player (i.e. no multi-verse), then the odds of winning (i.e. a universe with us in it), remain small. You only get 100% odds if there are many players (i.e. a multi-verse).

      A question not really addressed or answered by the multi-verse theory -- Why is there a lottery at all? If there is no lottery, then the odds are 0%. Why is there a universe or multi-verse at all?

    12. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Occum's Razor is still subject to the same flaws as any other observation from a single perspective. You need to be looking at all of the various Machinations of a possibility to determine if there is a "logical" view to be observed.

    13. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the 'proof' fails from the get go.

      Who says the wave collapses, it just appears to collapse from an outside observer.
      Occam's razor would say the wave form neither collapses nor branches

      But nevermind that, our MV PhD Deutsch guy also wrote a paper on the quantium NOT gate would build the simpliest gate to build quantum computers out of. (PSST its the NAND gate that builds the simpliest circuits, it's been proofed long before)

      Basically, all I am saying is he is the Dean Koontz of papers on quantum computing and mechanics.

      AC running away now, (you saw the article on the Video Prof suing anonymous posters)

    14. Re:Occam's razor by kylben · · Score: 1
      The lottery example was meant to be analogous to looking at the problem from a different perspective, not to literally analogize the universe and the fact that we are possible in it to a lottery.

      The alternatives in the post I responded to both came at the problem from a perspective of: given us, what are the chances the universe could support us? That's like saying: given my lottery ticket, what are the odds the number drawn will be the same?

      The other perspective says: given the universe, what are the chances that something is possible in it that can say "we"? Which is analogous to: given the lottery number drawn, what are the odds that someone's ticket matches the numbers?

      That's the problem with being the ones that get to ask the question, we think that we are the premise, rather than the conclusion.

      --
      Insightful and funny are really the same thing, except one has a punch line.
    15. Re:Occam's razor by Xtifr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The probability of the existence of other universes is unrelated to the probability of the existence of parallell universes. There could easily be $BIGNUM universes without any of them being parallel in the Many-Worlds-Interpretation of QM sense.

      Of course, it is worth pointing out that speculation about a creator merely pushes the question of origins back a level: where did this hypothetical creator and his/her/their universe come from?

    16. Re:Occam's razor by Mursk · · Score: 1
      Out of curiosity, what is your understanding of what Occam's razor really states? Because it can't really be "wrong." All it says is that "all things being equal, the simplest explanation tends to be the right one." (Actually it states that there is to be "no multiplication of entities without necessity," which is, in my opinion, subtly different.)

      So when you say it is often wrong do you mean that it is often the case that the simplest explanation tends NOT to be the right one?

      And I'm not just singling out the originator of the post to which I'm replying; a lot of posts mentioning Occam's razor seem to be misapplying it. It is not a hard-and-fast rule; more like a rule of thumb.

      --
      "This thing does science so hard, you say, 'I've never seen that much science.'" -Sam
    17. Re:Occam's razor by MenTaLguY · · Score: 1

      There's also other options like the transactional interpretation.

      --

      DNA just wants to be free...
    18. Re:Occam's razor by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, actually the MWI says the shit (i.e. wave function collapse) does not happen. The "split" is not a creation of new universes, but a change in our view of the universe. At the objective level, no split happens, and no wave function collapses. Instead, we ourselves get entangled with the observed objects (which is a normal result of any interaction in quantum mechanics). That interaction causes a "split" in the observed world, due to the fact that we ourselves, as observers, are part of it. We observe "shit happening", where no shit actually happens. Since in reality there's no collapse happening, all possibilities are still there, and therefore in a "parallel world" (which is just another projection of the same reality) a "parallel I" must have observed the other result.

      Now, which theory is simpler:

      Theory 1: As long as we don't look, everything follows law A, but as soon as we look, shit happens, and we have to apply law B.
      Theory 2: Everything follows law A, all of the time. The true reason why law B seems to apply is that law A also applies to us.

      Theory 1 is the standard Copenhagen interpretation. Theory 2 is the MWI.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    19. Re:Occam's razor by Biff+Stu · · Score: 1

      I'll be the first to admit that what I wrote was a bit glib. To me, the big problem with the Copenhagen approach lies in the violation of general relativity as posed by the EPR paradox and the whole "spooky action at a distance" thing. This tells me that we need to come up with a theory that will unify quantum mechanics and general relativity. Many smart people have worked on this for the past 80 years or so and we still don't have a solution. If we say that existance is composed of a series of all possible outcomes of individual quantum occurances, and our perception of this universe is based on a random walk through this highly multidimensional space of possibilities, we quickly find ourselves dealing with some big ontological problems. For example: Do we actually have any control over this random walk? Does free will really exist or is it just an illusion? I could go on, but it seems like the multiple worlds approach just opens a really big can of worms. Furthermore, I don't really see how this solves the EPR paradox or unifies quantum mechanics with general relativity. Unless the multiple universe picture solves those problems, I would prefer avoid mixing science with philosophy (at least at that level), for pretty much the same reasons that keep me from mixing science and religion. If the multiple universe picture were to unify quantum mechanics with general relativity, then we really would be looking at "one of the most important developments in the history of science."

    20. Re:Occam's razor by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      But you are incorrect. The probability of someone winning the lottery, any lottery, is not 1 unless all lottery numbers are played by someone. If there is one or more numbers that are not played, then the probability is less than 100%.

    21. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You (like almost everyone...) misinterpret the Copenhagen Interpretation. "Observer" in QM is ANY PROCESS WHICH IS AFFECTED by the collapse of the quantum wave function. That is if the photon can go left or right in the 2 slit experiment then it is 'observed' if any other particle in the universe CAN interact with it on its way to one or the other slit. If 2 WAVE FUNCTIONS interact, then they become entangled. That is ALL their possible states become related. So you could entangle 2 photons by passing one through either slit A or B, and another through either slit B or C, as long as neither one interacts with anything else in the universe (IE is observed). This leads to the neato 'action at a distance' behavior of entangled wave functions. Once one photon IS observed, the entire entangled waveform collapses...

      In any case, your comment about the CI doesn't apply. Nothing in QM makes people some special class of observers. In fact the idea of 'collapse' and 'observer' don't really precisely make sense. Given that an observer has another quantum wave function of its own how can you even say the observer observed anything? Its location at the point necessary to make the observation is ITSELF subject to localizing its own wave function. Beyond that consider the case of Schroedinger's Cat. Is the cat dead or alive? Well, if you're INSIDE the box, you can answer that question (IE the wave function has collapsed). If you're OUTSIDE the box, it hasn't. Thus the very notion of 'collapse of a quantum wave function' is meaningless in the general sense.

      In fact if you think about it the GENERAL case of the 'many worlds' interpretation is therefore also meaningless. There can be said to be many LOCAL "branches" of the universe, but the differences between them are all localized to one area of spacetime. One cannot say that 'the universe forks', one can only say that 2 versions of some localized portion of the spacetime continuum exist, and at whatever point they become indistinguishable they cease to have distinct existence.

      Both 'interpretations' are in all particulars indistinguishable.

    22. Re:Occam's razor by Surt · · Score: 1

      Yes, I was actually attempting to address both your points:

      1) Occam's razor is frequently used as if it is a proven fact, and as if there aren't any exceptions. The claim is indeed only for a tendency.
      2) Even that tendency claim is wrong. Rarely is the simplest explanation proven correct in the long run.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    23. Re:Occam's razor by mrmud · · Score: 1

      So they say they have a mathematical description of the parallel universe theory. One can construct a mathematical model that describes the geocentric solar system perfectly well, but the the heliocentric version is much simpler. So, which is simpler? (1) Shit happens. (2) Shit happens. Parallel universes are created.

      Well, the alternative being the copenhagen interpretation. Which is really interesting, because it states that a concious observation is what determines the collapse. So your list is more acurately described like this:
      (1) Shit happens. But only if a concious entity observes it.
      (2) Shit happens. Parallel universes are created.

      IANAQP.

      --
      -- MrMud
    24. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Particles in our mind"? AFAIK "observation" doesn't imply consciousness, it's just a useful term for a form of interaction which we would normally assume is passive. Any particle could "observe" another.

    25. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shit happens is of course obvious.

      The proponents of this theory aught to try to jump through a wall to one of those alternate ever spawning universes in some alternate reality. It might knock some sense into them.

      For every spawned/forked universes, one must collapse. Hopefully they make that one.

    26. Re:Occam's razor by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      Can you clarify what exactly laws A and B are?

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    27. Re:Occam's razor by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Can you clarify what exactly laws A and B are? Sure.
      Law A is the law describing the time evolution of an unobserved quantum system. That is, basically the Schrödinger equation.
      Law B is the law describing what happens when you observe something. That is, basically the collapse of the wave function.
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    28. Re:Occam's razor by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      That's easy: the simpler case is the second one, because it explains why parallel worlds are created.

    29. Re:Occam's razor by siride · · Score: 1

      Why is he wrong to say the NOT gate is the easiest? The NAND gate is only the simplest for solid state transistor-based circuitry. But quantum computers are not made of anything like that, so why should NAND necessarily be the easiest for quantum computers as well?

    30. Re:Occam's razor by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      In this case, someone has already won the lottery; Humanity exists. The chance that someone would have won the lottery is 100%, then.

      You know, because we exist.

      Arguements that start with "We shouldn't exist" always bore me.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    31. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't think EPR made use of the general theory of relativity, only the special theory, requiring locality.

      I believe that the many worlds interpretation avoids the problems of EPR because EPR tacitly assumes counterfactual definiteness. The many-worlds interpretation rejects the notion of counterfactual definiteness. In any given world, it is not possible to speak of the results which would have been observed if some other measurement were instead made, as those other measurements are only made in different worlds. At least that is my take.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counter_factual_definiteness

      I recall one prof at Oxford suggesting that the many-worlds interpretation might be the only interpretation consistent with relativity. Perhaps it was because this interpretation explains the results associated with Bell's inequality without sacrificing locality. The web page seems to suggest the consistent histories interpretation might do the same, since it rejects counterfactual definiteness.

    32. Re:Occam's razor by Repossessed · · Score: 1

      Occam's Razor is not so much a fact or theory as an axiom. It states that for two *equal* statements the simpler one is correct.

      This means that the answer to 2+2 is 4 and not 1+1+1+1 (both are true statements, the former is correct, because it is the simple one).

      People grossly misapply it, and almost never use it correctly.

      (I think the GP was trying to say this, but meh).

      --
      Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite (TM)
    33. Re:Occam's razor by David+Gould · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Occam's razor is useless in situations like this. Basically Occam's razor comes down to a judgment call. Right. Besides which, it's not a "Law Of Nature" anyway -- it's more a rule of thumb. Occam's Razor never "proves" anything. It just lets you make an educated guess as to which avenue of inquiry is, all else being equal (that part's important), more likely to be fruitful. (And thus, which one you'd be wiser to spend the effort to explore.)

      --
      David Gould
      main(i){putchar(340056100>>(i-1)*5&31|!!(i<6)<< 6)&&main(++i);}
    34. Re:Occam's razor by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      (1) Shit happens.

      Only if your boss observes it.

    35. Re:Occam's razor by suv4x4 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Reality consists of particles in quantum waves of superimposed states. Period. When we observe a particles state, it's state becomes entangled with the state of the particles in our mind, and hence we observe the particle as collapsing to a single state "in each world".

      Many people mix those up. Our "mind" doesn't have anything to do with it.

      The wave function collapses when a particle interacts with a macrosystem. When two macrosystems are separate from each other, we have to assume the other macrosystem is not coherent with us until contact.

      And remember contact *includes* photons reflected off the other macrosystem, so if we see it, otherwise put "observe" it, we're already in contact.

      This is why "observation" causes collapse. Not because we're smart.

    36. Re:Occam's razor by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      Yay for dropping belief as fact.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    37. Re:Occam's razor by Bonobo_Unknown · · Score: 1

      What is a 'moment' of time? Is it like an 'atom' of space? Is there a fundamental unit of time?

      --
      We don't believe in radical loony monotheistic religions from the middle east -- we're Christians.
    38. Re:Occam's razor by Slur · · Score: 1

      Existence versus nonexistence... as if there were either one of these things!

      Why should nonexistence even be brought up?

      Show me nonexistence first, then we'll talk.

      In terms of some thing existing...

      Conditions arise, relate, and cease.

      Show me something that exists, yet has no effect. It is a meaningless idea. That which exists, only does so by being an effect on some other existent thing. Thus, to affect is to exist. To have no effect is to not-exist.

      In this sense things go in and out of existence all the time.

      That is the nature of things.

      Does a thing exist if you aren't physically affected by it?

      No. Not in your universe.

      To receive a report of some thing or event - assuming an accurate report - is to be part of a physical chain of effects.

      You have been touched by an event.

      I believe it would be most accurate to say that only causality exists, and everything else is inference.

      --
      -- thinkyhead software and media
    39. Re:Occam's razor by flok · · Score: 1

      Nobody has ever explained exactly what an observation is (we are, after all, made of particles too) nor when this happens.

      I would say an observation is when a particle interacts with anything else.
      --

      www.vanheusden.com - home of Multitail, HTTPing, CoffeeSaint, EntropyBroker, rsstail, bsod, listener, nagcon, nagi
    40. Re:Occam's razor by ThomasCR · · Score: 1

      > There's an infinite number of universes
      Infinite? Which aleph number of universes do you postulate? Aleph1289? Above every aleph? How high?

    41. Re:Occam's razor by DerWulf · · Score: 1

      Be careful with that razor. Sometimes it shaves off vital parts. It should really come with a warning label "simple is not ALWAYS better. Only apply if two theories actually fit the observations"

      --

      ___
      No power in the 'verse can stop me
    42. Re:Occam's razor by DerWulf · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be cool if we could control these events on a large scale? Everyone could have a universe where every event turns out the way they wished for. Perfect luck, enternal bliss.

      --

      ___
      No power in the 'verse can stop me
    43. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Free will" is purely the province of philosophy. Science regards the brain as a physical system which follows physical laws to determine its actions. It's meaningless to ask whether you have free will, because you follow physics just the same as every other damn lump of matter.

      With that said, think of your brain as like, say, a star. Your brain decides when to eat, when to drink, when to breathe, who to love, and so on. It decides this based on calculation using the physical phenomena exhibited in its machinery.

      A star decides when to flare, when to expand, when to collapse, and so on. It decides this based on calculation using the physical phenomena exhibited in its machinery.

      Does the star think? Is the star self-aware? What does that even mean? As a system, it is aware of its state. It is aware that now would be a damn good time to flare. It is aware that conditions are right for it to collapse. There isn't much real difference between a star and you, other than that you're damn good at giving your systems a narrative.

      You are deterministic, your outcomes are decided by physical laws. But YOU are decided by physical laws. You are not a soul floating outside the brain, making decisions that are ignored because of quantum. You are quantum. So, if you insist on thinking about it in philosophical terms, yes, you have free will.

    44. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure. It's about 1x10^-44 seconds.

    45. Re:Occam's razor by SophisticatedZombie · · Score: 1

      Does either interpretation really require a mind? My understanding is that "observation" can be any material interaction of a particle like, rather than wavelike, nature. Discuss amongst yourselves. You'll find snacks and coffee over on the table.

    46. Re:Occam's razor by Mursk · · Score: 1

      No, because even for two equal claims, Occam's razor only says the simpler one TENDS to be correct. It is not an absolute statement.

      --
      "This thing does science so hard, you say, 'I've never seen that much science.'" -Sam
    47. Re:Occam's razor by Mursk · · Score: 1
      In response to your second point I would reiterate that the way Occam's razor is commonly states isn't really correct. This is where the subtle difference I mentioned comes in.

      If you read it as "no multiplication of entities without necessity," you'll see that Occam's razor doesn't even really make a tendency claim. It certainly doesn't mean that a more complex (i.e. less simple) explanation can't be the right one if you have the facts to support it. All it really says is that you shouldn't make up some wild-ass explanation for something without any basis in reason or any need to.

      Sorry to beat this thing to death, but it always bugs me when people misapply Occam's razor, and I figure /. is one place I can be a nerd about it. :) Maybe next I will attempt to convince people that what they think is Murphy's Law is actually Finagle's/Sod's Law...

      --
      "This thing does science so hard, you say, 'I've never seen that much science.'" -Sam
    48. Re:Occam's razor by dwye · · Score: 1

      > (1) Shit happens. But only if a concious entity observes it.

      No conscious observer is required.

      In the two slit case (the classical example of observer effect), if the detector that determined whether each particle took slit 1 or 2 broke, such that its reading were erased right after being made (say, disk drive head crashed and the OS ignored it), that would still result in two single-slit patterns adding together, rather than one two-slit pattern with varying levels of constructive and destructive interference.

    49. Re:Occam's razor by Surt · · Score: 1

      Well, I would expect there to be a natural number of universes (naturally), so Aleph null.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    50. Re:Occam's razor by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      We're in the only universe, which just happens to be perfectly suited and tuned to our existence.
      Well it's definitely not perfectly suited and tuned to my fucking existence, or else I wouldn't be sitting here bored at work reading slashdot, I'd be out licking cocaine off a pair of blonde eighteen year old twins' tits.
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    51. Re:Occam's razor by jbohumil · · Score: 1

      This suggests the quantum suicide gambit. Devise a fail proof device which will kill you as soon as it becomes know that the desired result has not occured. You should continue to exist only in those worlds in which the desired result occured. For example if you wish to live in a world in which you have won the lottery, create a device that will kill you if you lose the lottery. I'm not recommending anyone try it, but it seems theoretically possible. Of course the other even more disturbing outcome is the back water of infinte sorrow. Each fatality which occurs includes some small chance of survival which also occurs. Therefore in some sense we're all doomed to spend eternity narrowly escaping termination in what must become an increasingly bizzare state of being immortally close to death.

    52. Re:Occam's razor by DM9290 · · Score: 1

      "I don't know about everybody else, but the fact that all states can exist, yet I can only perceive them separately, is no stranger to me than that all moments of time exist, yet I can only perceive each one separately."

      Occam's razer refers to complexity. Not strangeness.

      --
      No one has a right to their *own* opinion. They have a right to the TRUTH.
    53. Re:Occam's razor by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1

      Many people mix those up. Our "mind" doesn't have anything to do with it.

      Wrong as far as Bohr and Heisenberg argued in the "Official" Copenhagen interpretation it the act of observation by an observer i.e. a human mind that causes the wave function to collapse.

      The wave function collapses when a particle interacts with a macrosystem. When two macrosystems are separate from each other, we have to assume the other macrosystem is not coherent with us until contact.

      Modern decoherence theory which examines the interaction of a quantum system with its environment or macrosystem, explains why the quantum superpositions that constitute the off diagonal elements of the density matrix are destroyed leaving the the diagonal states which are quasi classical states equivalent to the real world. We therefore have to treat these states as ontologically equal. Thus we arrive at the many worlds. If you wish to recover external reality you have to accept the many worlds interpretation.

    54. Re:Occam's razor by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

      Wrong as far as Bohr and Heisenberg argued in the "Official" Copenhagen interpretation it the act of observation by an observer i.e. a human mind that causes the wave function to collapse.

      It still makes no sense. What is "observer". When is a system complex enough to be called observer. If I shoot the observation with a camera, the "interpretation" says this video is undefined until I see it. But if someone else sees it and I don't see it, is it collapsed? What if he dies after he observed and before he told me.

      You see where this is heading. Mind has nothing to do with this. Macro and micro systems is where it's at.

    55. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is simpler:

      (1) Shit happens according to Schroedinger's wave equation, whose predictions on small scale systems are extremely well-confirmed. As the equation predicts, the Universe splits into non-interacting parallel branches in the quantum state space and observers in virtually all of those branches see the sorts of large-scale physical behavior we observe.

      (2) Shit happens according to Schroedinger's wave equation, whose predictions on small scale systems are extremely well-confirmed. As the equation predicts, the Universe splits into non-interacting parallel branches in the quantum state space and observers in virtually all of those branches WOULD see the sorts of large-scale physical behavior we observe, if they were to exist. But, in reality, these countless other predicted observers are eradicated by a Flying Spaghetti Monster that always spares one and exactly one of these branches (us), which continues to evolve according to the wave equation until all but one of its descendants (which the wave equation predicts will inevitably form) are destroyed by the same Noodly Appendage. The FSM, however, chooses not to destroy large portions of the universal wave function when doing so would reveal to us its existence. This is why small-scale systems obey Schroedinger's wave equation: because if the FSM were to rip off their decohering branches, we would notice the absence and have proof of His Noodly Appendage. So, only when our brain states become entangled with a system experiencing decoherence, all but one of our parallel selves will experience the sort of quick, painless, merciful death only the FSM can provide--they'll be dead before they even get a chance to think "Hey, did I hear a click on that Geiger counter?" The single surviving branch will be safely somewhere else in the Everett tree, sipping cocoa and enjoying the now-unobstructed view of hyperspace. We don't know how entangled our brain states have to be before the FSM takes notice, or why the FSM seems so concerned with our brains and what they observe, or why it is so repugnant to him that our brains should behave like every other bit of matter in the Universe. So, we'll just have to hope the answers lie in Quantum Gravity and Noodle Theory, which fortunately for the FSM have nothing to say right now.

      Obviously, since both theories give the exact same empirical predictions, they are equally valid and which one is true is mostly a matter of personal taste and interpretation.

    56. Re:Occam's razor by kartune85 · · Score: 0

      The parent asked the question, I answered it. If you choose not to agree with my perspective/belief, that's your choice. Although I find it interesting that I receive the troll label when a post like "Yay for dropping belief as fact." is submitted, which contains no valid argument. Just an attack on a post that conflicts with its PoV. I believe that is the definition of a troll.

      --
      "Failure to conform to majority belief does not make you a troll."
    57. Re:Occam's razor by ThomasCR · · Score: 1

      So there it stops? Good to know, that this parallelism doesn't go beyond the first aleph! - Thomas

    58. Re:Occam's razor by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1

      It still makes no sense. What is "observer". When is a system complex enough to be called observer. If I shoot the observation with a camera, the "interpretation" says this video is undefined until I see it. But if someone else sees it and I don't see it, is it collapsed? What if he dies after he observed and before he told me.

      You see where this is heading. Mind has nothing to do with this. Macro and micro systems is where it's at

      You still don't get it. The scenario you describe is a variant of one known as "Wigner's friend" (google it). Yes it does show the absurdity of the official physics community interpretation of quantum mechanics, known as the Copenhagen Interpretation proposed by Bohr and Heisenberg and opposed by Einstein and Schrodinger.

      I, like you, don't believe it and I too believe that "Macro and micro systems is where it's at". The study of the interaction of a quantum system (microsystem) with its environment (macrosystem) a process known as decoherence has been widely studied over the last couple of decades. Many physicists argue that the mathematics of this process leads inevitably to some form of the many worlds interpretation. Among those physicists we can probably include as a shortlist:

      David Deutsch, Max Tegmark, Martin Rees, Frank Wilczek, Bryce DeWitt and Steven Weinberg and many others. This is not intended as an arguement from authority but to demostrate that the offical view on the interpretation of quantum mechanics is rejected by a number of leading physicists including several Nobel prizewinners who support a many worlds interpretation.

      I would argue that the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum is the only real alternative to state vector collapse that does not involve new and unkown physics (like Roger Penrose's OR hypothesis) and to the absurdity of the Copenhagen Interpretation that abolishes physical reality. The Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is the only alternative for a physical realist who believes in the existence of external reality.

    59. Re:Occam's razor by Repossessed · · Score: 1

      Um, no. It says that it *is* correct. Show me a mathematical or logical statement where this does not hold true.

      --
      Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite (TM)
    60. Re:Occam's razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are deterministic, your outcomes are decided by physical laws. But YOU are decided by physical laws. You are not a soul floating outside the brain, making decisions that are ignored because of quantum. You are quantum


      You can't have it both ways ("deterministic" and "quantum" [mechanical]).

      QM is a probabilistic system whose results can be described statistically, not deterministically.

      The difference is that at "human brain", or even cellular scales, the correspondence principle applies. That is, the non-determinism of QM reproduces classical deterministic physics in the limit of large quantum numbers. The numbers are sufficiently large at the scale of entire cells, organelles (in eukaryotes) and most of the distinct features thereof.

      However, the quantum numbers are very small for some interactions (some protein deformations, especially those in photon-pigment reactions, many terminal reactions in electron transport chains, and a variety of neurotransmitter and signal transudction reactions) and consequently they are non-deterministic when studied in isolation.

      It is in those reactions that emergentism (which agrees with your description of the brain/mind) are really interesting, since the coupling of the thermodynamically favourable reactions to the thermodynamically unfavourable ones (conformational change causing work that includes a conformational reversal) is not something that is currently predictable using only classical, deterministic physics.

      This leads in to all sorts of (frankly mostly useless) philosophizing about whether decoherence time can be extended through evolutionary processes (Penrose, for example). However, the critical underlying interactions in biological systems are certainly probabilistic QM processes, and not deterministic classical ones, and that does not in any way lead to a solution for (or a clear elimination of) the hard problem of consciousness .

      Like "science" in your description, I think consciousness is an emergent property of a mechanical system, and I do not have sufficient evidence to exclude the possibility of emergent consciousness in a star (which is also mechanical system). However close analysis of the individual mechanical interactions so far has not made much headway on what it is that predicts or enables "giving your systems a narrative".

  34. an old chestnut... by Speare · · Score: 4, Funny
    • An engineer says that the equation approximates reality;
    • A physicist says that reality approximates the equation;
    • A mathematician simply doesn't care.
    --
    [ .sig file not found ]
    1. Re:an old chestnut... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And a programmer calls it a feature, not a bug.

  35. Blazing Universe by earlymon · · Score: 1

    Mathematically the bush-like branching structure created by the universe splitting into parallel versions of itself can explain the probabilistic nature of quantum outcomes. - The Oxford team, led by Dr David Deutsch

    My mind is a raging torrent, flooded with rivulets of thought cascading into a waterfall of creative alternatives. - Hedley Lamarr

    --
    Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
  36. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lol

    [I am poster of GP]

  37. Move Along, Nothing to See by CyberGarp · · Score: 1

    This is yet another example of an academic discovering how easy it is to generate press. Math can prove that a mathematical system is consistent, and within that system can prove properties that result in that system. There are several wonderful mathematical models that describe physical phenomena with incredible accuracy. However, these models do not prove these properties, they just expose some relationships and properties of our world that are not necessarily obvious, and are useful in planning, engineering etc. The claims of "proof" of parallel universes is an abuse of the mathematical language.

    --

    I used to wonder what was so holy about a silent night, now I have a child.
  38. Great! by hanssprudel · · Score: 1


    Whose up for a game of quantum suicide?

    1. Re:Great! by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      Whose up for a game of quantum suicide?

      Whenever I play that game it just never works!

    2. Re:Great! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Again!? The more times I do it I asymptotically approach death, and yet I asymptotically approach proof that I cannot die. Alright. Just _one_ more time.

  39. ALL YOUR BASE by AragornSonOfArathorn · · Score: 1

    ARE BELONG TO US. At least in this universe. In some parallel universe, Zero Wing was translated properly and AYBABTU never became an internet meme. Sucks to be them ;-)

    --
    sudo eat my shorts
  40. But in Bizarro World he gets ... by crovira · · Score: 1

    blown by a gorgeous blond with a fabulous rack, an ass that stops traffic and a face that camera's love.

    "She's got the face of an angel, the heart of a saint ... and the mouth of a two dollar whore"
      -Three Dead Trolls in a Baggy

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
    1. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by no_pets · · Score: 1

      And yet that description is only considered positive features in this universe.

      --
      "A government is a body of people, usually notably ungoverned." - Shepard Book Quoting Malcolm Reynolds
    2. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you write "camera's" with an apostrophe, why didn't you also write as's, gorgeou's, fabulou's, and stop's??? Or was that a quantum apostrophe?

    3. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by Poltras · · Score: 1

      Aaaaaah quantum grammar! Is there anything Shroedinger can't solve?

    4. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1
      .... Unfortunately, she 'blows' him away with a .303 .

      Sigh... but it was a nice last image.

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    5. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes! Why it is compelled to hump it's dead counterpart. Or at least lick it's sack.

    6. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by freewaybear · · Score: 1
      quantum apostrophe?

      Thanks for my new band name!

      --
      Registered Linux User #404114 [url=http://www.punkoiska.com][img]http://img406.imageshack.us/img406/4379/posbannercf5.g
    7. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by fractoid · · Score: 1

      Yes. I mean no. I mean maybe... I won't know unless we ask him.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    8. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by Brickwall · · Score: 1
      Aaaaaah quantum grammar! Is there anything Shroedinger can't solve?

      Yes. What do with the cat shit.

      --
      What was once true, is no longer so
    9. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by somersault · · Score: 1

      Damnit.

      As a contribution to the actual discussion, I seriously doubt that the universe ever ends up branching, as that would mean energy being created out of nothing..

      --
      which is totally what she said
    10. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 1

      Which is not a problem at all. The the laws of thermodynamics only really work for isolated systems, such a branching set of universes wouldn't be an isolated system and could make energy out of "nothing".

      --
      Not a sentence!
    11. Re:But in Bizarro World he gets ... by somersault · · Score: 1

      What a load of bollocks :p

      --
      which is totally what she said
  41. Sliders by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    What if you found a gateway to a parallel universe where you the same but everything else is different...I found the gateway

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  42. Proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Put a gun to your head. Pull the trigger. If you are still alive, you have proved the many-worlds theory.

    1. Re:Proof by mr_mischief · · Score: 1

      This only proves you have bad aim, didn't load the gun, the safety is on, it's a water gun, or some other issue. ;-)

    2. Re:Proof by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      I'd say that the quantum immortality theorem would also work if you do load a real gun, but simply decide not to pull the trigger for whatever reason. Or if you, like most of us, read about the experiment but decide it's not really not worth the risk.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    3. Re:Proof by UncleTogie · · Score: 1

      Put a gun to your head. Pull the trigger. If you are still alive, you have proved the many-worlds theory.

      Call me crazy, but all that'd determine is if you'd die HERE. Wouldn't impact the other universe, AFAIA. Anyone?

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
    4. Re:Proof by mr_mischief · · Score: 1

      It could _work_, but how do you _prove_ it worked?

      From my lay person's understanding, there'd be some physical evidence of something attributable to chance or choice, and only statistically could one start to piece together evidence for the theorem. That is, unless you can detect the alternate realities directly. How does one go about doing that?

    5. Re:Proof by brunascle · · Score: 1

      there's actually some theory, dont remember what it's called or even if it had a name, which if true would mean you could play Russian Roulette forever and never die, because your consciousness follows the universes in which you're still alive. that may be what the GP is referring to.

    6. Re:Proof by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      Doesn't this mean that all of us are immortal, then?

    7. Re:Proof by UncleTogie · · Score: 1

      Is it a scientific theory? I've personally never heard any refer to "consciousness"; some folks might even take that as proof of a "soul".

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
    8. Re:Proof by oever · · Score: 1

      That would mean the universe only splits in situations where you would die. Otherwise your conscious self would be allowed to split up.

      It also means that if I see someone die, he/she did not have a conscious self. Or that that person was forked off into a different world. But for that to happen, you would also have to be forked, which was not allowed.

      Pretty crazy consequences that to me make the Russian roulette theory very implausible.

      --
      DNA is the ultimate spaghetti code.
    9. Re:Proof by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      No. The entire trigger mechanism could fail through many quantum means, such as a cross-section of the protons decaying and it breaking in half.

      Trust me, it will happen if Many Worlds is right.

      Granted, it will only happen in one out of every septillion universes, so sucks for all the other yous. (Of course, they're dead, so what do they care?)

      Also, talking about 'here' is wrong. The universes you live would be just as much 'here' as the universe you died in, because they haven't split yet.

      I'm not sure other people would believe it, though. We need to do is a massive scale.

      What we really need is some process that will destroy the entire earth with 99.99999999999999999999999999999999999% certainty. Then, when it doesn't, we can look around and conclude that, yup, obviously there are parallel universes splitting off and we're in one, because, frankly, that outcome was insanely improbable.

      Obviously, the other universes couldn't conclude that, of course, but, then again, they wouldn't be doing any concluding at all, so it hardly matters what their view of the universe is.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    10. Re:Proof by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      It's not a real theory, it doesn't need to be. It's just a corollary to Many Worlds.

      Basically, the idea is that, at any moment, in at least some universe, your consciousness will not end. At any branching, at least one of them includes a universe where 'you' continue to exist for another moment. If you think about it a little bit, you'll get it.

      Incidentally, this is one of the reasons I don't like Many Worlds: It makes a hash out of physical laws.

      In some universe, somewhere, there are human beings that think they can fly unaided. Not because the laws are different, or the humans are different, or they're just delusional, but every single time in history they have thought 'I would like to lift up into the air', some crazy quantum miracle has happened that has allowed it.

      And a world where people can 'travel in time' with a thought, although what is really happening is that the entire universe just randomly rearranges itself to look like the past and this happens to coincide with these apparent temporal jaunts, and then it just happens to rearrange itself to look like the present again when they 'get back'.

      Yes, those universes are extraordinally unlikely, but they still must exist under Many Worlds.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    11. Re:Proof by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Would that mean overwriting some other poor schlub's consciousness? What'd he ever do to you?

      Would that ALSO mean that there are universes where everyone who has ever existed is still alive?

      Neither of those sounds pleasant.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    12. Re:Proof by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      I still don't think that is proof of anything. Even if we did that thing that with 99.9999999999999% destroys the earth, and it doesn't get destroyed, there's no proof of parallel universes. There's still a 0.0000000000001% chance that the earth even before the experiment that the earth is not destroyed not out of any parallel universe theory but out of sheer luck.

      Take the gun experiment. Suppose I don't shoot myself, but I shoot someone else in the head. If that person lives, is that proof of parallel universes? Taking it further, if I shoot 1,000,000 people in the head and one lives, is that proof of parallel universes? Someone lived. Now, if I shoot 999,999 other people and myself, and I'm the only one who lives, is that proof of parallel universes? There's exactly the same chance of that one person being me as any single other person.

      Anyhow, I don't know where I'm really going with this, but a situation where the odds are firmly stacked against my continuing existence doesn't seem like any kind of proof at all.

    13. Re:Proof by pugugly · · Score: 1

      Oohhhh, damn, so it's really still 2322? And I thought I'd invented a flying time machine.

      This sucks man.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    14. Re:Proof by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "because your consciousness follows the universes in which you're still alive"

      Finally, a scientific explaination for all the zombies I encounter during the morning peak hour.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    15. Re:Proof by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      The parallel universe theory is just a way of getting infinity back into a currently scientifically defined finite universe. Of course you can simplify the whole issue by having the universe as being infinite, rather than finite, but that creates a problem with time as constant, a finite dimension, as any dimension of an infinite universe has to be infinite itself, so motion is the more applicable infinite dimension in an infinite universe.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    16. Re:Proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The universe wouldn't have existed before it was forked into being, so there wouldn't have been a prior consciousness to overwrite. At least I think that's the idea (otherwise, yeah, that would stink). Rather, there would be a new instantiation of the previous branch...sort of like reloading a game saved just before a difficult encounter. The history, then, would be the same as the universe from which it branched, but that universe (and its many future branches) would have a different present and future.

      That would imply that there are universes where everyone who had ever lived was still alive, but not everyone ever born in any particular universe would necessarily have been born (or would have not already been dead) in any of the other versions. Quite solipsistic, though.

    17. Re:Proof by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      You can't possibly gather enough statistics to prove quantum immortality, since by definition you can't use anyone experience as proof. You can only use yourself as proof, and you need to somehow measure the potential lethality of every event.

      Because of its epistemological deficiencies, QI is a useless, unprovable theory. And even if it's true, you wouldn't be able to test it, since the longest life-line worlds are the ones in which you either choose against or are prevented from pulling the trigger.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    18. Re:Proof by Bonobo_Unknown · · Score: 1

      That's assuming that you can't be in two places at the one time without knowing about it. That's also assuming a lot about time that we don't know.

      --
      We don't believe in radical loony monotheistic religions from the middle east -- we're Christians.
    19. Re:Proof by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Anyhow, I don't know where I'm really going with this, but a situation where the odds are firmly stacked against my continuing existence doesn't seem like any kind of proof at all.

      What do you mean? The odds are 100% you will live, somewhere.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    20. Re:Proof by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      See, you can't assume that fact is true and proceed to use it to prove that it is true. What I'm saying is that if it weren't true, it is still possible that you can perform these experiments and arrive at the same experimental results as if it were true. Therefore, no proof.

    21. Re:Proof by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      What I'm saying is that if it weren't true, it is still possible that you can perform these experiments and arrive at the same experimental results as if it were true.

      No you can't. If it's untrue you will arrive nowhere because you're dead.

      If it's true, OTOH, you will arrive in a universe where it's easy to demonstrate because you are somehow alive. (A bunch of the dead yous will arrive in other universes, but I'm not certain why you should care about those guys.)

      It's hard for other people to extrapolate the truth or untruth, because most of them will be in a universe with a dead you, and won't be able to tell which kind. But for you, it's easy. You, of course, will only be in the amazingly improbably universe where you lived.

      This is why I recommend doing the entire planet at once. Then everyone can see.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    22. Re:Proof by dwye · · Score: 1

      > Put a gun to your head. Pull the trigger. If you are
      > still alive, you have proved the many-worlds theory.

      Larry Niven already wrote that short story, as All The Myriad Ways.

    23. Re:Proof by Keeper+Of+Keys · · Score: 1

      Does a parallel world theory help explain why the bullet's particles all simultaneously leapt one foot to the left?

    24. Re:Proof by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      No you can't. If it's untrue you will arrive nowhere because you're dead.

      You're absolutely wrong here. If it's untrue, there is a 0.00000001% (or however minimal we're setting it) chance that you stay alive. That is if it is untrue. If it is true, there's a 100% chance you stay alive. Either way, it is possible to arrive at the same result. There is no way to tell how you arrived at that result.

      If we're setting the odds at 0% survival, there is still no proof, because even with multiple universes, there would be no way to survive then. The only way to survive in that case would be to not shoot yourself, which doesn't provide proof of multiple universes, either.

      As far as "doing the entire planet," I doubt that would make much of a difference. There's no saying that anyone else will live through it; it still only guarantees that you see it, because it's possible that everybody except you dies.

    25. Re:Proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect you are applying a standard of proof here that is much stronger than the one you normally require of explanations. In a certain sense, this is sensible, because the result is so counterintuitive. However, if you require absolute certainty instead of a probabilistic argument, then I ask: do you believe in physical laws? Consider a choice between an ordered universe and a completely random one. There is a non-zero probability that your observations including your memories of the universe having behaved as if ordered in the past arise purely by chance. The ordered universe theory also explains your current observations. By your standards, I don't see how you could reject the random universe theory. And maybe you don't. Maybe we shouldn't.

    26. Re:Proof by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      That is true, but I think Occam's Razor has an application here. The ordered universe is simply the most practical reason for our memories being the way they are. The multiple-universes theory, however, doesn't have the same advantage. It's alot easier for me to believe that, if I live after shooting myself in the head, the bullet simply must have deflected off my skull, or missed any critical portion of my brain, or left me a vegetable. Probability does not apply to former events. Again, if multiple universes is false, and you live through the shot to the head, the probability of your having lived is entirely irrelevant, and there is a way to trace back (given the proper knowledge) how exactly you survived.

    27. Re:Proof by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >Take the gun experiment. Suppose I don't shoot myself, but I shoot someone else in the head. If that person lives, is that proof of parallel universes?

      No, other people are perfectly free to die, it is only your personal consciousness that would be uninterrupted in a MWI immortality scenario. It only works because *you* can't experience death if there is always some quantum possibility that your consciousness will go on.

      Personally, I think that artificially induced unconsciousness (anastesia, being knocked out, etc) proves that this does not work.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    28. Re:Proof by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely wrong here. If it's untrue, there is a 0.00000001% (or however minimal we're setting it) chance that you stay alive. That is if it is untrue. If it is true, there's a 100% chance you stay alive. Either way, it is possible to arrive at the same result. There is no way to tell how you arrived at that result.

      Man, you've suddenly got an amazingly strict standard for scientific results.

      All experiments have a margin where they might succeed or fail simply by chance, so I don't know why this one is any different. If you really don't trust it, you can always repeat it a few times.

      As far as "doing the entire planet," I doubt that would make much of a difference. There's no saying that anyone else will live through it; it still only guarantees that you see it, because it's possible that everybody except you dies.

      Only if you design the experiment stupidly. I specifically said 'the planet' instead of 'every person'. It's very hard to imagine a way you survive without a planet. And, if you do, that's also incredibly improbably and hence proof.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  43. Recursive world problem by davro · · Score: 0

    Pfft at Parallel Universe redirect to Many World theory (MWT) or relative state formulation, theory of the universal wave function

    Assume the MWT theory is valid, if possible.

    Question) Is the MWT valid in any of the parallel/many world's. If so then there could be a recursive world problem ?

    One of MWI's strongest advocates is David Deutsch. According to Deutsch the single photon interference pattern observed in the double slit experiment, can be explained by interference of photons in multiple universes. Viewed in this way, the single photon interference experiment is indistinguishable from the multiple photon interference experiment.

    Personally i thought Holly solved this problem back in October 11, 1988 with the Holly Hop Drive (a box with Start and Stop on it)


  44. hot supermodel... by Aneurism75 · · Score: 1

    Now I can prove mathematically that there is a version of the universe where I scored with that hot supermodel!

    1. Re:hot supermodel... by ettlz · · Score: 1

      ...And that there's a parallel universe in which you're the hot model you scored with.

    2. Re:hot supermodel... by nagora · · Score: 1
      Now I can prove mathematically that there is a version of the universe where I scored with that hot supermodel!

      It only allows for possible alternatives.

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    3. Re:hot supermodel... by MLease · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting about Beauty and the Geek.

      -Mike

      --
      I'm sorry; I don't know what I was thinking!
  45. idiotic circular logic by frovingslosh · · Score: 2, Insightful
    ....showed mathematically that the bush-like branching structure created by the universe splitting into parallel versions of itself can explain the probabilistic nature of quantum outcomes

    Or in other words, this science fiction nonsense about parallel worlds, unscientific because it can never be tested or proven, and which was inspired by observations of quantum mechanics, is now supposedly able to explain, guess what, ... quantum mechanics, the very concept that the nonsense was built on in the first place.

    The absurd number of parallel universes that would have to be created is mind boggling, since, at the very least, an entire universe would have to be created every single time any atom decayed (one for the universe where that atom happened to decay at that instant, another for the case where that atom didn't happen to decay). Strange that none of the wackos who advocate this, and I use the term very loosely, "theory", bother to expain where all of the mass and energy is coming from for all of these extra universes. Note that we are talking about far more universes than atoms in our own universe. Absolute hogwash.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
    1. Re:idiotic circular logic by MontyApollo · · Score: 1

      Actually, many great scientists at one point or another in their career have supported the view, so calling them wackos is kind of extreme. I think even Feynman supported this view at one point.

      >>The absurd number of parallel universes that would have to be created is mind boggling

      I agree that is mind boggling, but much of modern physics has been mind boggling at the time it was discovered. Einstein could wrap his mind around Relativity, but even he had problems with quantum physics.

    2. Re:idiotic circular logic by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      In parallel Russia, QM explains QM.

    3. Re:idiotic circular logic by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      So, if you'd care to share where the all the mass and energy came from to create this universe and show that these other universes cannot access the same or similar source I will subscribe to you Hogwash! newsletter.

      cheers,

      j

    4. Re:idiotic circular logic by TrailerTrash · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My question would be, are the number of parallel universes countably infinite (same cardinality as the integers) or uncountably infinite (same cardinality as the real numbers)? If countable, this suggests that the number of quantum potential states in the universe are countable, and would seem to lend credence to the idea of an orderly deterministic universe. If uncountable, then the multiverse is infinitely deep - more satisfying, perhaps, in a religious worldview.

      Unless, of course, God(s)(ess)(esses) constructed the universe deterministically, to compute something. I suspect it is to create the question to which 42 is the answer.

    5. Re:idiotic circular logic by Manchot · · Score: 1

      I'm no expert on QM, but I'd say that it'd have to be uncountably infinite. If, for example, you did a position measurement on a free particle in a Gaussian superposition of momentum states, you could get any position value corresponding to a real number.

    6. Re:idiotic circular logic by lawpoop · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The absurd number of parallel universes that would have to be created is mind boggling, since, at the very least, an entire universe would have to be created every single time any atom decayed (one for the universe where that atom happened to decay at that instant, another for the case where that atom didn't happen to decay). What exactly is the absurdity scale you are using to measure the absurdity of this idea? Four parallel universes are okay, six are goofy, seven are silly, 10 are ridiculous, and 1000 or more are absurd?

      Strange that none of the wackos who advocate this, and I use the term very loosely, "theory", bother to expain where all of the mass and energy is coming from for all of these extra universes. That's like asking where the mass and energy in our universe came from. It's the same answer in all parallel universes -- it was there all along. When they talk about a new universe branching, it's not a big bang event, where a new universe is born, it's an altered copy its twin, identical up until the point where the quantum decision was made. It has a completely identical history after a certain point and therefore, the same mass and energy. Parallel universes do not 'share' energy, nor information, nor anything else. They don't 'seed' or 'give birth to' each other. They are totally out of contact with each other. We wouldn't even know about other ones, if not for the math.

      Note that we are talking about far more universes than atoms in our own universe. Absolute hogwash. I can't see why anyone modded you insightful here. You seem to be arguing from personal incredulity. Not that I'm claiming that these guys are right or their theory is true, but your skepticism seems more emotional than rational to me.
      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    7. Re:idiotic circular logic by porpnorber · · Score: 1

      They don't 'seed' or 'give birth to' each other. They are totally out of contact with each other. We wouldn't even know about other ones, if not for the math.

      Are you sure about this? Temporal symmetry doesn't apply across forks? In particular, is there some mathematical reason to require that two universes that converged on the same state would somehow maintain their identity?

    8. Re:idiotic circular logic by Jangchub · · Score: 1

      You must be quite studied in this field to have such strong opinions.

  46. 42 by xtracto · · Score: 1

    You know the answer is 42.

    --
    Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    1. Re:42 by onemorechip · · Score: 1

      In a parallel universe, they know the question.

      --
      But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
  47. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by cnettel · · Score: 1
    It's not obvious that anything will happen, just thanks to the mulitple-words interpretation. Some things actually have probability zero.

    Now, I'm not well-versed enough to say anything substantial about spontaneous particle pairs appearing and fixing things, but I think you really need to consider the possibility that at some point (maybe when you were born, maybe yesterday, maybe tomorrow) life according to the path you've experienced so far will, inevitably, lead to your death. Not "almost surely" (limes p -> 0), but simply p(surviving beyond date X) = 0.

    We also have the sad part (mentioned when this line of thinking has been presented on /. in earlier posts): there might be an infinite number of universes where you survive, but in a disastrous majority of those, it will be as a maimed and crippled individual in total pain. Somehow, it seems easier to imagine that just a human brain is moved out of harm's way by an (almost) infinitely small chance, than that this happens to the complete body without harm.

  48. More links by SiliconEntity · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here is the New Scientist article being cited:
    http://space.newscientist.com/article/mg19526223.700-parallel-universes-make-quantum-sense.html
    However it is behind a paywall. See Google Groups for the whole thing.

    There is a great quote by physicist Max Tegmark: "The critique of many worlds is shifting from 'it makes no sense and I hate it' to simply 'I hate it'."

    As far as the meat of it, traditionally the Many-Worlds Interpretation has had two technical objections raised. The first is called the basis problem, and the second is deriving correct probabilities. The basis problem is that when the universe "splits" it's not clear how it should split. The math allows for infinite different ways to split, but we only see one way. This has been solved in recent years by the study of decoherence, which in MWI terms is like looking at the splitting process up close. Turns out it can only happen one way in practice. So that one's done.

    The article is more about the other one, deriving probabilities. Actually it's easy to derive probabilities in the MWI, but they're wrong. The right probabilities are what is called the Born rule, and it's been hard to get those. David Deutsch came up with a new idea in 1999 where he proposed tying it in to decision theory. He said that we really care about probabilities because they influence how we make decisions about what to do. If we can derive a reasonable decision theory within the MWI, then we've essentially explained probabilities. His work had some shortcomings but subsequent efforts have largely resolved those.

    So now for the first time, the two traditional technical problems with the MWI have reasonably good solutions. Hence we are back to, as Tegmark says, "I hate it" as the main objection to the theory. Since that's not really a good argument, it can be said that the MWI should be considered the most compelling candidate for an interpretation of QM.

    One final link, here is one of the papers that extends Deutsch's idea about decision theory and pretty much closes the holes: http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0312157. It's pretty technical but still a lot more readable than most physics papers.

    1. Re:More links by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      See Google Groups for the whole thing.

      Or, you know.. pay for it.

    2. Re:More links by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      So now for the first time, the two traditional technical problems with the MWI have reasonably good solutions. Hence we are back to, as Tegmark says, "I hate it" as the main objection to the theory. Since that's not really a good argument, it can be said that the MWI should be considered the most compelling candidate for an interpretation of QM." That makes it a candidate. The trouble is, you can turn the same argument around. You "hate" the idea that the universe just inherently depends on probability, and so you find the many-worlds viewpoint more "compelling," even though they're identical from the viewpoint of every experiment we can do. If you resolve all the problems with the MWI then fine, we'll all have to admit it's possible. That doesn't make it better than the interpretation we already had, which had no problems to begin with! It just puts them on equal footing.

      It's a judgement call, is the bottom line. If all the kinks are worked out of the MWI for good, then out comes Occam's Razor. There will be interminable arguments between scientists over which one they consider "simpler," and therefore better. Is it better to postulate an invisible pair of dice in the sky, or an endless infinity of universes we can never observe? As I understand your post, you've chosen your side in that debate, for the present; that's fine. But nothing in your post, or the article from what I've seen, settles the debate. In fact, unless one or the other eventually leads to a deeper theory of physics that can't exist without a multiverse (or can't exist with it) and is experimentally testable, it can be argued that this debate lies outside the ability of science to settle.
    3. Re:More links by etymxris · · Score: 1

      Hence we are back to, as Tegmark says, "I hate it" as the main objection to the theory. Since that's not really a good argument, it can be said that the MWI should be considered the most compelling candidate for an interpretation of QM.

      You should know that's a terrible argument. "Some people hate this theory. Hating a theory is a bad reason for not supporting it. Therefore, this is the best theory out there?"

      The problem with MWI is in its extravagant ontology. A better no-collapse interpretation is Price's advanced action view. Basically, the local variables are _not_ independent of future measuring devices. The only objection against this view is that it is incompatible with "free will". But this is ridiculous, as it can be no more incompatible with free will than any other block view of the universe. And most physicists already agree with a block view of the universe. One may think the measurements can be bilked, leading to causal paradoxes, but the problematic experiments in QM are precisely those in which measurements cannot be bilked.

  49. Standard of evidence is getting low these days by SlappyBastard · · Score: 1

    I abhor mathematical proofs of supposedly scientific things. Math is a tool for constructing human thought in meaningful exchanges for other humans to understand. It is, therein, a language and not a scientific form of proof in and of itself.

    As just one more language, math suffers the faults that any language can suffer. Just because something makes a working equation does not give it validity. Certainly no more than when a sentence is grammatically correct does that make the sentence a proof of anything. "My cat is a dog."

    However, if anyone would like to propose a repeatable and verifiable experiment for finding the universe where George W. Bush lost in 2000, I am all for conducting it just after I pack my suitcase.

    --
    I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
    1. Re:Standard of evidence is getting low these days by frankenheinz · · Score: 1

      Yup. One of my physics professors once told me: "If you can't observe it, it isn't physics."

      --
      The law is not an ass. No really.
    2. Re:Standard of evidence is getting low these days by aminorex · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > if anyone would like to propose a repeatable and verifiable experiment for finding the universe where George W. Bush lost in 2000

      Just look out of your window.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    3. Re:Standard of evidence is getting low these days by SlappyBastard · · Score: 1

      Hey! That's a shorter and better version of what I said. No fair!!

      --
      I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
    4. Re:Standard of evidence is getting low these days by SlappyBastard · · Score: 1

      We accept the win conditions set down by white, upper-class land holders in the 1790s to ensure the continuation of their gains whereby they can have a small group of electors nullify a popular vote should the smelly masses not make the right choice.

      --
      I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
    5. Re:Standard of evidence is getting low these days by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      True, but I doubt even they had though to involve the Supreme Court in the elections.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
  50. Re: Begs the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a parallel universe, you titled this "Begs the question", and I felt inclined to post a nasty response.

    I much prefer this universe.

  51. Devolve this back into simplicity by postbigbang · · Score: 1

    And say, in a Heisinger way: if the many many possible worlds aren't available to us, then by our observations, there is only one state that evolves strictly from the present.

    The past is 'in concrete'. So far, no evidence that we can change it, otherwise it wouldn't be history or the past.

    We can change, and do, the present, and cannot so far leap very far into the future (thus altering the time coefficient).

    At the quantum level, so are things at the macro or universal level; it's the same number with significant digits or places to the right of the decimal point. You can observe the big (universe) picture, or the micro/femto/whatever particle you want level. They are the same, and one has the rules of the other; it's the observation point that's amusing.

    The bottom line: should multiverses exist, we can't get to them, and they are therefore irrelevant and meaningless and more strangely, matter created and energy expended evolved from ether, which makes no sense to me. So many basic laws of physics are violated to explain multiverses that I can't accept the concept until these are rectified. Simple conservation of matter/energy prohibits this multi-state set of pseudo-universes.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    1. Re:Devolve this back into simplicity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We can change, and do, the present"

      How exactly would we do that? As the parent stated this is fundamentally a deterministic universe. You seem to be muddy'n the waters with your spirituality.

    2. Re:Devolve this back into simplicity by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      Sure. John Calvin's in charge. Fate is everything. And this chamber has a slug in it, or does it?

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    3. Re:Devolve this back into simplicity by Thyrsus · · Score: 1

      In the multiverse interpretation, the past is not "concrete" - multiple different pasts can become indistinguishable. Consider a cubic nanometer of air; it consists of a large number of molecules of various superimposed positions and velocities. Given a huge budget, you could come up with arbitrarily accurate approximations of those positions (losing, in the limit, the proportional information on the molecules velocity, or vice versa). Many different possible combinations of molecular positions will be indistinguishable in the absence of those fantastically expensive observations - which, in the overwhelmingly more common case, never occur. So in a multiverse interpretation, there are multiple *pasts* as well as multiple *futures*. The further back in time you go, the larger the variety of probable pasts, just as the further forward in time one speculates, the larger the number of probable futures, for some constant measure of "probable".

    4. Re:Devolve this back into simplicity by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      If something changes in the past, then the past becomes the future. Time can be nonlinear (viz gravity and what it does), but it marches on. Observance of time, given its stretches, is what we measure the age of our perceived universe, and other both terrestrial and extraterrestrial objects. Red shift tells us how far away the stars are, as an example.

      Dirac, Shrodinger, Heisenberg, Einstein, and many other physicists have tried to prove the uncertainty (and hence the superfluity of states) you describe.

      The multiverse interpretation still battles with conservation of matter and energy, Kirkoff's law, and a raft of other problems. This heterodyning of the universe's time coefficient is impossible to swallow for me. I don't have to see the universe as a straight line. I do however, have to defy probability and defer to the actual. In a multiverse, probable pasts can exist. I don't buy that. Probable futures, yes, but there is but one which will emerge, no matter the number of observers or observations or where they observe from. It will be historic.

      Is my time, traveling in a fast aircraft, different from the time on the ground of mother Earth? Yes. Is the fact that there is a variance proof of the observation of multiple times proof of multiple universes? No. For both, history is static. It was.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    5. Re:Devolve this back into simplicity by kartune85 · · Score: 0

      We can change, and do, the present, and cannot so far leap very far into the future

      Not sure what you were getting at here... but,

      The bottom line: should multiverses exist, we can't get to them, and they are therefore irrelevant and meaningless

      I reckon that is the bottom line of this whole topic. Really, what is the relevance if you can't prove or even use findings regarding parallel universes. What benefits are there even if it were humanly possible to view even one alternate universe?

      We could sit down and write down every possible outcome of each of our actions, but that would be a lot of time wasted for no'ones gain. Alternatively, we could think about what we're doing and decide on the best action to take at that point in time.

      --
      "Failure to conform to majority belief does not make you a troll."
    6. Re:Devolve this back into simplicity by Thyrsus · · Score: 1

      Could you elaborate (or cite references) on the multiverse contradictions to conservation of matter/energy, Kirkoff's law, etc.?

      I have stated what I understand the multiverse interpretation to say; I do not "believe" in it, but I am looking for a way to test it. If I understand correctly, the work beginning this discussion is a proof that the multiverse interpretation is mathematically consistent - not that it is the only possible understanding of reality. I like my scientific hypotheses to make testable predictions, the way natural selection predicts that bacteria will develop drug-resistant strains, and the way quantum mechanics has been rather successful in explaining brownian motion, the behavior of light waves, the "shape" of simple molecules, and many other phenomema. Perhaps this "interpretation" is subject to neither experimental confirmation nor contradiction; that would be good to know also.

    7. Re:Devolve this back into simplicity by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      First, imagine that in a state, we'll call it T, that is time that is current, as in now, from the observer's viewpoint.

      If matter can neither be created or destroyed, multiple instances of matter (e.g. energy, too, as one is the other) are not possible at T. Conservation is destroyed. Multiverses are inconsistent with this.

      Kirkhoff's laws have to do with observations of states of electrical junctions; what goes in must come out, as observed at T. As visaged as a representative of conservation of electron movement, it also applies as an example of coherency as it applies to a single instance. Former instances had other states, as will future instances of the measurement at the junction at T.

      Multiiple instances of energy/mass spawned in to or from a multiverse means that the basic nature of matter is not what we know. Imagine bringing multiple concurrent realities into realtime. If this has been done, we have no means to observe it so far, and these additional instances might be irrelevant as they may be real, but not realizable. I like that it's been fun to use quantum math to try to explain certain observations and this doesn't mean I don't believe the math behind it. Rather, multiverses, no matter the convenience of having theorems that seem to imply them, are conjecture until you can get past Heisenberg and find out where the cats actually are (as in Shrodinger). Without this observations, it's just seemingly clever explanation that contradicts direct observation. Call it application of existentialism over the conjecture of theorem. Denial? Perhaps! Skepticism-- absolutely.

      The conservation of matter might mean that there are multiple manifestations, e.g. a multi-state of matter. In this unlikely scenario, matter is many things (energy, too) at once, and has been and always will be until it's stopped somehow. Re-entrance into the past becomes the future, as it changes the outcome of the present. In other words, the basis of reality, once altered, must be done in the future. It's a loop that may destroy or remove the instance, in a way, like nulling it. Imagine two phases 180 degrees from each other. They cancel each other out, when summed. Yet the energy/mass of the state is very high, and equally, very low, within the dimension and at the time measured. Conjecture....this is. What would remain in this conjecture is what we have as our reality.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  52. Hey idorts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop pretending like you know what these articles are talking about. There's no shame in admitting it.

  53. I'll bet ... by pimpbott · · Score: 1

    ...in some other parallel universe, they are right.

    uh...wait a sec.... :)

  54. MOD parent up by MontyApollo · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the links and explanation.

    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      But it isn't: it was designed from the very beginning to be experimentally identical to the standard interpretations of quanutm mechanics. The linearity of QM means that you cannot ever perform an experiment to detect other worlds because they do not interact.

  55. PI Icon with Einstein Icon... by tyrione · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't it be an icon of Niel's Bohr when representing Quantum Mechanics?

    1. Re:PI Icon with Einstein Icon... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only in some universes.

  56. Re:Another version of this post in an parallel uni by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 1

    Yes. Pity it didn't happen in this universe.

    --
    And the brethren went away edified.
  57. Infinity and predestination? by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    I've always wondered if the Many Worlds hypothesis implies predestination. If we posit an infinite number of existing alternative universes, how can we speak of creating more with the choices we make today? How can you add to infinity? Doesn't that imply that all possible universes in fact already exist, and therefore all possible futures are all already determined?

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:Infinity and predestination? by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      If we posit an infinite number of existing alternative universes, how can we speak of creating more with the choices we make today? How can you add to infinity?

      Quite easily. Infinity + 1 = infinity. Infinity * 2 = infinity. Infinity * infinity = infinity. And they're all the same infinity.

      Example of the first case: take the infinite set of integers [2, 3, 4, 5...]. Add the integer 1 to this set to give the infinite set of integers [1, 2, 3, 4, 5...].
      Example of the second case: take the infinite set of integers [2, 4, 6, 8...]. Add the infinite set of integers [1, 3, 5, 7...] to this set to give the infinite set of integers [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8...].
      Example of the third case: see Cantor's proof that the rationals are denumerable, as it's rather hard to type in a /. post.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    2. Re:Infinity and predestination? by onemorechip · · Score: 1

      Quite easily. Infinity + 1 = infinity. Infinity * 2 = infinity. Infinity * infinity = infinity. And they're all the same infinity.

      Actually, that depends on whether you are talking about infinite cardinal or ordinal numbers.

      --
      But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
  58. Sloppy Semantics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the article: "According to quantum mechanics, nothing at the subatomic scale can really be said to exist until it is observed. Until then, particles occupy nebulous "superposition" states, in which they can have simultaneous "up" and "down" spins, or appear to be in different places at the same time."

    So according to quantum mechanics the other universes don't exist. At least some standard semantics are being respected here. Notice how this contradicts the article title... While the mathematical model requires more terms than what ends up existing according to quantum mechanics (see above) the mathematical model makes no existential commitments at all. The 'other-universe-terms' are required to make the model work, but that's hardly sufficient to imply the existence (in any sense) for those universes. Establishing which terms in a model correspond to existent entities is more complicated than establishing which terms are required to make the model consistent with some other theory or observation.

  59. Okay...Let's stay sane in this universe... by PatSand · · Score: 1
    And I quote from the article:

    The Oxford team, led by Dr David Deutsch, showed mathematically that the bush-like branching structure created by the universe splitting into parallel versions of itself can explain the probabilistic nature of quantum outcomes.

    So what they have done is demonstrate a mathematical framework that can explain the stochastic/quantum nature of our universe in a self-consistent framework that uses multiple parallel universes. But that is not "Proving" it... But let's not dismiss this so quickly. Recall that good ol' Albert (Einstein) had a quaint theory that altered our perception of the universe when we could start verifying it.

    Here are some things I would like to see investigated using this math framework:

    Can this explain Quantum Tunneling?

    Can this explain Action at a Distance? (Particles separated by meters [of late] behave identically)

    Can we create a situation where a quantum particle has to swap universes? That would be the killer proof...

    Folks have been working on reducing String Theory from 26 dimension to 11-10 (sorry, I haven't kept up). Could the high-dimensional strings be the manifestation of the "bushes"?

    Is it possible to send Gravity into a parallel universe around an object, thereby creating null gravity? Things might get a bit heavier in that universe, but hey, it isn't ours...;-)

    Rather than dismissing this as crackpot, consider viewing it as a mathematical attempt to develop a framework to explore the theory and perhaps prove/disprove it sometime in the future.

    Of course, Science Fiction has already dealt with this set of scenarios...

    --
    Supreme Granter of Doctor of Obviology Letters ("A FIRM Command of the Obvious")
    1. Re:Okay...Let's stay sane in this universe... by argent · · Score: 1

      Can this explain Quantum Tunneling?

      Can this explain Action at a Distance? (Particles separated by meters [of late] behave identically)


      that's all covered in the original paper.

      Can we create a situation where a quantum particle has to swap universes? That would be the killer proof

      I don't believe that the EWG hypothesis allows this.

      Folks have been working on reducing String Theory from 26 dimension to 11-10 (sorry, I haven't kept up). Could the high-dimensional strings be the manifestation of the "bushes"?

      No, the bushes aren't in a physical dimension. "Bush" is just a way to visualize the probabilities of different states of the system.

      Is it possible to send Gravity into a parallel universe around an object, thereby creating null gravity?

      No. You're thinking of the wrong Greg Egan novel. We're in Quarantine, not Diaspora.

  60. Just a meaningless explanation? by ledvinap · · Score: 1

    I can't see the point ..
    What does we gain if we allow parallel universes?
    If we only choose one of possible universes when we make observation, it's only other explanation of probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics. And probably quite useless ..

    Or is there some interaction between between realities after split? Is there some physical phenomena that could be explained by existence of parallel universe but not by probability waves?

    And ... single electron interference should signify that parallel universes interact with each other .. until observed. So when i observe something, i find out which universe I am in AND disconnect/destroy all other possible universes.

  61. This is old news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    It's 2007, they are USB universes nowadays.

  62. I am both dead and alive. by RealBothersome · · Score: 1

    So, in a constantly branching parallel universes system, I am both dead and alive. Which really translates to "I am always alive." This is because if this version of me dies, I simply wake again in one of the other verses. I just won't have any memory of the mistake I made that killed me in this one. Is that how you guys figure it?

  63. Bush-like? by tyrione · · Score: 1
    showed mathematically that the bush-like branching structure...

    Not to be confused with the notion of Bushisms.

  64. Universe means "one everything". by mark-t · · Score: 1, Redundant

    So how can there be more than one? That's like trying to have more than one identity element or zero element in a vector space. It doesn't work.

    1. Re:Universe means "one everything". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The same way we can have sub-atomic particles. We fucked up and named something we didn't understand.

    2. Re:Universe means "one everything". by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Then why did they declassify Pluto as a planet?

  65. read one of Deutch's papers by kwikrick · · Score: 2, Informative

    or tried to, anyway. It seems to be related to the
    paper the article talks about.

    http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/quant-ph/0104033

    It's more of an information theory paper, it seems to me, and
    not so easy to relate to any verifable theory of the
    universe/multiverse.

    --
    assignment != equality != identity
  66. Kyle Reese is the father of backwards time travel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If time's arrow is running backwards, then in the movie "Terminator" the beginning is really the end of the series.

  67. Many-worlds grooming issues by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 1

    What happens if the good version of you has a goatee?

    --
    And the brethren went away edified.
  68. Truly, what IS new about this??? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I do not see anything new here at all. The "many worlds" hypothesis has always depended on a hypothetical "probability tree" to describe the odds of quantum occurrences. This idea was new to me, oh, about maybe 30 years ago, and was not actually new then.

    Are they trying to claim that their mathematical probability tree corresponds to a "real" probability tree? If so, on what basis do they make that claim?

    To them, I say: "Show me evidence, and I will believe. Until then, stop bothering me with old ideas."

  69. Modded Down? by AutumnRecluse · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure why you were moderated down but you do pose an interesting question. The universe as we know it offers plenty of opportunities for a creator or deity to exist. The very notion that parallel universes could exist and that nonlocality does indeed exist are enough to cause an atheist to question.

    To each their own, but I think you make a good point.

    --
    It's not the weight, but the size of the struggle that matters.
    1. Re:Modded Down? by kartune85 · · Score: 0

      GP made a very good point. I have noticed members on this forum don't like it when people make valid points, I managed to get a troll rating (or two). They don't seem to like it when people say what is true.

      --
      "Failure to conform to majority belief does not make you a troll."
  70. A Ying Yang on a Broken Record by AutumnRecluse · · Score: 1

    I personally believe that the brain is like the needle on a record player. We already know that the existence of memory allows for the notion of cause and effect to become past, present, and future. Beyond that, I believe we are extrapolating quantum data which aligns us to our current universe(s).

    It could even be that our physical senses are what tether us to a particular track in reality.

    --
    It's not the weight, but the size of the struggle that matters.
  71. Insulting, your honor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I went to court the other morning trying to collect child support. Evil-X was there already, noxious fumes rising from its blubber laden hull. Not the expected brimstone fumes, but the stench of stale cigarettes and fat old woman sweat and cheap perfume.

    She had spent four hundred dollars on a shyster.

    "Is there anyone who hasn't signed in?" the bailiff outside the courtroom asked. I went up and spoke to them. They still hadn't corrected the screwup the State's Attorney had made. "She'll call you," I was told.

    Nobody called me. The judge was at his bench, and I went in.

    There was a huge black man standing before the judge. Apparently this fellow was unemployed and hadn't been paying his child support.

    "Look, Judge, I gots no problem with child support."

    "Yes, you do," the judge replied. "You may not have a problem with the idea of child support, but you do have a problem with actually paying it.

    There was some nearly subaudible back and forth between the judge and the large man standing before him, when the judge said "Do you think this is a joke, Mister Johnson?"

    Mr. Johnson replied quietly, too quiet to hear. The judge repeated, "I'll ask you again, Mr. Johnson," very firmly, "Do you think this is a joke??"

    "I gots no fuckin' money!" Johnson replied. "You gonna sent me to jail?"

    "Would you like me to cite you for contempt, Mr. Johnson?"

    "Fuck you, motherfucker!" Gasps and giggles from the gallery...

    "Contempt of court!" the judge ordered. "Take him to jail."

    "Fuck you!" Johnson added rather stupidly.

    "That's two" the judge said.

    "Fuck you! Eat shit cocksucker!"

    "That's three."

    "Kiss my big black ass, motherfucker. Fuck you!"

    "That's four!"

    "Suck my dick bitch!"

    By the time he got to eight, Mr. Johnson was being led out in handcuffs. The judge shook his head in wonder. This was more entertaining than a TV courtroom drama, for sure.

    Another black man came in through the door Mr. Johnson left through, wearing Sangamon County's black and gray striped jail uniform. I always thought prison stripes were only in cartoons, but I guess this is Springfield.

    Apparently this fellow had run afoul of the judge before, ignoring a court order or something. Or maybe he, too, had called the judge a motherfucker. If so, this time he was respectful towards the judge, who asked him if he was employed.

    "No sir."

    "What kind of work do you do, Mr. Black?"

    "I'm a cook, sir."

    "A cook?"

    I think he got out of jail, but I'm not sure as the State's Attorney's staff finally got around to talking to me. "We need a little further information." I walked out in the hall with her.

    It seems Evil-X had stupidly lied to her lawyer, who was under the impression that she lived with my older daughter and was supporting her. I informed the State Attorney lawyer (representing me on the taxpayer's dime) that no, X had moved in with her boyfriend and my oldest daughter was living alone, and was being supported by SSI.

    I went back in and sat down, where a white fellow was explaining to the judge that he was unemployed. "Didn't you list..." the judge looked at a piece of paper, "your children as dependents on your unemployment claim?"

    The SA lawyer came over and whispered to me that "he's going to ask the judge for a continuance, and I'm going to object. Did you have to take off work today?" I answered in the affirmative.

    Evil-X's lawyer and the SA went to the bench. More mumbling between the lawyers and the judge, and the judge announced "I'm granting a continuance. You will be here on December second and you will both be prepared. Am I understood?"

    I was given a document with the new court date, and drove back to work. Fortunately for me, I had the presence of mind not to curse at the judge. Indeed, one should respect a judge, because you can most definitely go to jail for the crime of gross stupidity.

    Now I have another worry. If

  72. - Bravo by Dr.+Hugh+Everett+III · · Score: 1



    Nicely explicated!

  73. YVY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Parallel universes do not exist.YVY.tsixe ton od sesrevinu lellaraP

  74. How does quantum states end up in car accidents? by jmoo · · Score: 1

    So how exactly does this work? In the article the author talks about in one universe you avoid a near collision, in another you hit a car and die, and in another you hit the car but survive. How does the quantum state of one atom in one universe end up with a car crash and in another no crash? I realize this just example, but the popular conception of the many worlds is that you would have very different histories between each universe - if I went left in stead of right. But the only difference between each universe would be small quantum fluctuations, just how much difference do we end up with?

    --
    The world isn't run by weapons anymore, or energy, or money. It's run by little ones and zeroes, little bits of data.
  75. So, it's a 'copy on write' universe? by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1
    That would explain the 'Schrodinger cat' issue. In the parts of the universe that don't 'care' about the state of the cat, you don't have to branch. You only have to branch those parts of the universe that are affected by the state of the cat.

    Thus, until you observe the cat, you are in an unforked portion of the universe (with respect to the (un)dead cat). Once you observe the cat, your section of the universe forks into either the branch where it died, or the branch where it lived.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  76. Better article on this subject by mlimber · · Score: 2, Informative

    I haven't found the "New Scientist" reference this article cites, but I did find another, better article on the subject: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2007/09/21/sciuni121.xml

  77. There are alternatives by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

    Nonlinear processes can have seemingly probabilistic behavior but still be completely deterministic ... no need for wave collapse at all. I must admit no one has actually formulated a fully functional nonlinear QM theory though :)

    1. Re:There are alternatives by pugugly · · Score: 1

      But isn't that what disproved? My (layman's) understanding of it was that it proved that deterministic theories and QM were mutually incompatible, and that later experiments proved that the winner of the two was QM.

      And, btw, just to go off topic while there are smart people watching, can somebody please explain to me why exactly a non-deterministic theory like QM should be unable to lose information, aka the Hawking information paradox?

      If it's non-deterministic, then you cannot, with certainty predict the future, even with certain information of the present, and by the same notion, there would be multiple pasts that can produce a given now.

      But as I understand the information paradox, it is based on the concept that the past be (at least in theory) reconstructible from the present, which seem to me to be incompatible with a non-deterministic theory. In fact, if (as I understand it) the corollary to increasing entropy in a system is that the mathematical description of the system is continuously getting simpler, that would imply that information *is* lost as entropy increases.

      Is there a layman's explanation for this?

      Pug?

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    2. Re:There are alternatives by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      You can't prove anything outside of mathematics and there seem multiple ways to make deterministic theories compatible with EPR experiments. For instance there is the grand daddy of deterministic QM ... Bohm, who's theory Bell himself liked and thought far too readily dismissed by the physics community.

  78. Not really,because the universes arent 'parallel' by rufusdufus · · Score: 1

    The term "parallel universe" is a misnomer because it implies that these other universes do not intersect our 'real' universe. In fact, the "parallel" universes are not parellel at all, and cross one another and the 'real' universe infinitely in a wavelike fashion, cancelling and reinforcing one another.

    To say that there are an infinite number of universes branching off is like saying that a waveform is the superposition of an infinite number of small waves, stepfunctions, or what have you, and in fact that is exactly how we deal with them mathematically. But we don't boggle at the idea of a wave having infinite dimensions, we recognize this is an artificial persepective induced by our mathematical tools.

  79. Re:How does quantum states end up in car accidents by CheshireCatCO · · Score: 1

    There are many ways to leverage atomic-level (things in the domain of QM) changes into macroscopic effects. For example, the exact quantum state of molecules used in setting states in your brain are quantum mechanically defined (don't ask me the details, I've forgotten them). Flip it one way, it's possible that you show up to the intersection 30 seconds earlier or 30 seconds later by almost-forgetting (or just remember) your keys.

    I don't think (I *hope*) is asserting that the car is itself subject to QM in the same sense as an electron is, but this whole matter *is*, after all, the basis for Schroedinger's Cat.

  80. Nothing here gained over adding Just 1 dimension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why add a billion when just adding just one will do?
    Occam's razor says "Fail"

  81. Groundbreaking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article doesnt actually say what the groundbreaking breakthrough was, but thats because its like a spinning coin, once the breakthrough is observed it ceases to be groundbreaking nor a breakthrough.

  82. So unlucky by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why didn't I got the one where I'm a rich famous actor?
    Maybe cause I'm still ugly on every parallel universe... DAMN!

  83. Re:Good Luck with that Tag Line by corbettw · · Score: 1

    The same thing has been happening to me. I've gone from Excellent karma to Positive in just a few months. Just today, I had five negative moderations in just a few minutes. I emailed CmdrTaco about it and asked him to look into it, he promised that he would. Hopefully they'll put something in place to stop the abuse of the moderation system before it gets truly out of hand (assuming it hasn't already). I'd hate to see Slashdot devolve to be more and more like Digg.

    --
    God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
  84. Re:How does quantum states end up in car accidents by jmoo · · Score: 1

    I'm not totally convinced by the quantum mind arguments but I do agree that little effects can lead to big changes (butterfly wings and all that). It seems to me that if the many worlds theory is correct that at the beginning (big bang or what not) that each quantum state of a universe subdivision would end up with very different universes (galaxies in different locations, different states of matter, even different physical laws if the changes were enough).

    --
    The world isn't run by weapons anymore, or energy, or money. It's run by little ones and zeroes, little bits of data.
  85. Tree in the woods? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So observing a particle affects it state? Well I'll be darned! Maybe a tree really doesn't make a whisper when it falls in the woods and no one is around...!

  86. Improbable Universes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My conceptual problem with these parallel universes is that there is for example an Universe where the most improbable outcome always realizes. There the Infinite Improbability Drive would be possible! Everybody wins the lottery because they all bet the same winning number. In such improbable universes, stating laws of physics as we know them would be impossible. Imagine a Universe where slices of bread always fall the buttered side down...err wait wrong example... where all coin flipping goes head.
    At the other end, there is an Universe where the most probable outcome always realizes. Flipping coins always giving exactly 50% heads and 50% tails. In most of these improbable parallel universes, the laws of physics, as we know them and that instantiated these universes, could not be not be applied and generalized. You could invent any set of physical laws and find a universe where these laws are followed by random instantiations. So what is the meaning of these universes and the laws that governs them?

  87. Where's the paper? by zunger · · Score: 1

    All I can find is this rather content-free press release. I tried Deutsch's home page, SPIRES and arXiv, and none of them seem to have any papers by him on this subject since 2002.

  88. Oh really? by mosel-saar-ruwer · · Score: 2, Informative


    Math can prove that a mathematical system is consistent, and within that system can prove properties that result in that system.

    Oh really ?

  89. Re:your sig by rleibman · · Score: 1

    Repeal the 17th amendment? Considering that the 16th was never properly.. ratified... the 17th is prohibition, which then wasn't repealed (the 21st mentions the 18th by number, so it is really repealing women's vote in my renumbering). So you want to repeal prohibition (I agree). But we should really repeal the 16th as well! OK, keep your signature, I gave myself a headache.

  90. Re: and/or 'lazy evaluation' universe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Immutable photons with copy on write behavior, and lazy wave equation evaluation that's deferred until a measurement is taken.

    Further proof that God wrote the Universe in Lisp...

  91. Re:How does quantum states end up in car accidents by brunascle · · Score: 2, Funny

    well, here's one way. use this site. if you get a 1, go drive head-on into someone.

  92. Re: you never die in your dreams by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Life is like a dream. You never die in your dreams.

    I've died in a dream -- twice. Both were in the early 1990s. The first time I was hang gliding and I fell to my death. Everything went black, and I didn't dream again for a few weeks. The second time was shortly after I started dreaming again. I was hiding in a bank looking out the windows at the robbers making a getaway. They came back inside and shot me in the back of the head. Everything went black, and I didn't dream again for several years.

    p.s. Around the time I stopped dreaming I also lost my photographic memory that included both audio and video. I nearly failed out of school as a result, because I had been relying on my short-term recall instead of actually learning things.

  93. Why exactly is this surprising? by argent · · Score: 1

    I thought this outcome was an obvious result of the original EWG model. Whether the "collapse of the wave function" is a real effect (in the Copenhagen interpretation) or a side effect of the way our measurement devices (including our senses and conscious minds) work, the uncollapsed (unobserved) state vector produces the correct results after the collapse ... there's no reason to assume that this would magically change if the collapse was "held off" indefinitely and the measurement was just performed in effect "in parallel" across multiple states.

    That is, it would be headline news (well, for a certain kind of paper) if this study produced any other result.

    What exactly am I missing?

    Also, this doesn't "prove the multiple universe model", it just confirms that it's consistent with observation, but that's kind of the point of the model.

  94. yes, indeed by m2943 · · Score: 1

    showed mathematically that the bush-like branching structure created by the universe splitting into parallel versions of itself can explain the probabilistic nature of quantum outcomes."

    And it also explains where the missing socks go, what the number "42" means, and why your battery always runs out on your cell phone when the conversation turns interesting.

    In fact, it shares this property with a lot of mathematical assumptions. For example, if you assume that "1=0", all sorts of interesting mathematical facts follow from that (and their opposites, too!).

  95. It's not mass, it's information... by argent · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Strange that none of the wackos who advocate this, and I use the term very loosely, "theory", bother to expain where all of the mass and energy is coming from for all of these extra universes.

    The mass and energy isn't coming from anywhere, because there's no new particles being created. The particles are the same ones, in all universes, their state is just getting more complex, and each "parallel universe" is just a description of one consistent state of all the particles of the universe over all histories. We only observe the particles as as having measurable (subject to Heisenberg) positions and velocities because we're using other particles to measure what those positions are.

    A better question might be "where is the information needed to describe the state of the particle stored". Or to put it another way "how many bits does God's Computer have, and can we hack it?"

    1. Re:It's not mass, it's information... by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      Or to put it another way "how many bits does God's Computer have, and can we hack it?" Your answers are "42" and "only if you can code in base-13", respectively.
      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
  96. I'm tired of all these theories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wake me up when any of this nonsense actually contributes something tangibly positive to the world.

    There are too many otherwise smart people just building complicated messes which fit known parameters of the universe and then go on to ASSUME the world is a reflection of their model.

    These techniques are great as long as your focus is gaining real world knowledge from their use. Otherwise I have a theory of my own related to egos of the people who pedel this nonsense.

  97. Re:How does quantum states end up in car accidents by argent · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that if the many worlds theory is correct that at the beginning (big bang or what not) that each quantum state of a universe subdivision would end up with very different universes (galaxies in different locations, different states of matter, even different physical laws if the changes were enough).

    Well, yes, that's kind of a direct outcome of the model. The universe is a superposition of all possible states of the universe, and we only "observe" a little tiny selection of those states because we're measuring the universe using tools that are inside the universe.

    It's weird, but if you think about it a while it makes sense.

  98. Omniscient creator that tolerates free will by jeblucas · · Score: 1

    I've always appreciated the Many Worlds hypothesis because it jibes with my religious views. I am an Orthodox Jew and I believe in God as One and all the other strangely capitalized tenets of faith. The Many Worlds hypothesis lets me easily mesh an omniscient creator with a universe that has free will. God knows every outcome of every "decision" at the quantum level. Whichever "path" is chosen is a function of free will and randomness, but God knows all the endings.

    --
    blarg.
    1. Re:Omniscient creator that tolerates free will by Limerent+Oil · · Score: 1

      The Many Worlds hypothesis lets me easily mesh an omniscient creator with a universe that has free will.
      So does your god care about all the parallel outcomes equally, or only the "real" one? Furthermore, how does a multiple-parallel universe god answer prayers when every possible outcome "happens" in some part of "his" creation?
    2. Re:Omniscient creator that tolerates free will by jeblucas · · Score: 1

      Ascribing the feeling "caring" to God smacks of anthrocentrism; I'm a little uncomfortable assigning one feeling or another to Him. The other universes are just as real, aren't they? I thought that was how Many Worlds worked. I imagine God cares for all of them--they are all His creation. I'm not sure I understand your other question. How does God answer prayers if all the outcomes happen? How are those related?

      --
      blarg.
    3. Re:Omniscient creator that tolerates free will by DerWulf · · Score: 1

      That's the beauty: he doesn't. Therefore the the 'events' prayed for still follow the law of the universe and happen according to their probabilty. QED.

      ;-)

      --

      ___
      No power in the 'verse can stop me
  99. What is an observer? by SimonInOz · · Score: 1

    Quantum theory appears to state (IANAP, though I started a degree in it, but moved to IT cause it was more fun ... then) that an object (a very small object) may exist in multiple states until observed.

    The act of observation fixes [collapses the eigen state] the state of the object observed. If it has an entangled twin, the state of that is resolved at the same time.
    Pussyfooting around trying to say "No no, it was fixed all the time, we just didn't know" is NOT what is going on. (And yes, I have read that quote that says "if you feel you understand quantum mechanics intuitively, actually, you just plain don't understand it"). I recall recent experiments showing this.

    The multiple universe proposal doesn't appear to solve this "spooky action at a distance".

    But the real question is - What is an observer. And why the heck does it matter?

    --
    "Cats like plain crisps"
  100. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by geekgirlandrea · · Score: 1

    I die in dreams all the time.

  101. Schrodinger's Fridge by Admiral+Justin · · Score: 1

    ... All this and no Bob the Angry Flower?

    http://www.angryflower.com/schrod.gif

    I agree with this comic, by the way, actual beers are far better than possible beers.

    --
    You will be baked, and there will be cake.
  102. In another parallel universe, by Johann+Public · · Score: 1

    parallel universes were just mathematically proven to not exist.

  103. Simple by halcyon1234 · · Score: 1

    public class Universe {}

    public void main() {
    Universe parallels[];
    int max = MAX_UNIVERSES;
    bool multiverse_exists = true;
    for (i=0; i++; i<MAX_UNIVERSES)
    {
    parallels[i] = new Universe;
    }

    while (multiverse_exists)
    {
    multiverse_exists = run_multiverse(parallels);
    }

    }

  104. falsabile - hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >>it is a prediction. Given that it is a prediction of a thoroughly successful theory, we should be compelled to accept the prediction as correct even if we cannot directly test it.

    uh. like the FSM yeah? god is a pretty ok theory by those rules...

  105. Sign next to my front door by reboot246 · · Score: 1
    I had a sign made to put next to my front door.

    "Schrödinger may or may not have slept here."

  106. built-in paradox? by amigabill · · Score: 1

    So, if parallel universes exist for all possible permutations of possibilities, then I see a built-in paradox. Consider all permutations of if they exist or not and the correctness of those conclusions:

    1. Parallel universes exist, that is correct.
    2. Parallel universes do not exist, that is wrong.

    but also:
    3. Parallel universes exist, that is wrong. and
    4. Parallel universes do not exist, that is correct.

    How can all permutations of these conclusions truely exist in parallel universes? Because if it must be possible that all permutations do exist, then it also must be that there are no parallel universes, at least that must be true somewhere. Or does that represent a fork in the multiverse, and there are also parellel multiverses?

    1. Re:built-in paradox? by ThomasCR · · Score: 1

      Good thinking, I agree with you.

  107. ISO Big Bang 1.0 by epine · · Score: 1


    He obviously hasn't read his ISO Big Bang 1.0 spec. closely enough. The language reads "quantum mechanics behaves *as if* it bifurcates into parallel universes". The actual mechanism is implementation defined. Consult your documentation on Local Universe for more details.

    I've stated this humorously, but I mean it quite seriously. The other universes don't necessarily exist merely because your local universe behaves as if they did. To a certain level of accuracy, the orbits of the bodies in the solar system behave as if epicycles exist. What did that prove?

  108. Re: you never die in your dreams by mark-t · · Score: 1

    You continued to dream. You just stopped remembering what you dreamt (which is normal... many people are completely unaware of their dreams when they wake up), but you definitely continued to dream.

  109. Parellel in space or time? by heroine · · Score: 1

    One theory says the parallel universes occupy different spaces in a single infinitely large space. This theory says the universes occupy the same space but we only perceive one at a time.

  110. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is supposed as a possible way to establish the validity of the many-worlds interpretation:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_suicide

  111. oblig. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Soviet Russia, universe parallels you.

  112. Russian universes by renegadesx · · Score: 1

    In some parallel universes the link posts you

    --
    Make SELinux enforcing again!
  113. Communication with parallel universes by gregor-e · · Score: 1

    If communication between parallel universes were to be attempted, it would naturally have to flow backward in time, through a point where both universes share a common ancestor. Although tachyons are said not to exist, or, if they were to exist, could not possibly bear information, perhaps there is some physical phenomenon which could carry information backward across the time dimension, allowing progeny universes to send messages?

  114. But to get to those other parallel universes... by JackMeyhoff · · Score: 1

    ... you must travel with a overweight bearded opera singer... http://sfon.tv/Television/S/Sliders/Images/Sliders_Cast.jpg

    --
    http://www.rense.com/general79/wdx1.htm
    1. Re:But to get to those other parallel universes... by MLease · · Score: 1

      Opera singer? I thought he was a dwarf!

      -Mike

      --
      I'm sorry; I don't know what I was thinking!
  115. Highlander Universe by Traf-O-Data-Hater · · Score: 1

    ...there can be only one.

  116. How about... by gustep12 · · Score: 1

    How about: A.) "Noticing", or measuring, causes the superposition to collapse into a particular outcome. B.) Superposition continues to exist, but it is featureless, eternal, complete, and just plain boring. So currently your attention is focused on exploring a harmonious subset of particular outcomes.

  117. Bush? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    showed mathematically that the bush-like branching structure created by the universe splitting...

    Putting "bush-like" and "universe splitting" in the same sentence makes me a bit nervous, thinking about our political situation.

    1. Re:Bush? by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      Putting "bush-like" and "universe splitting" in the same sentence makes me a bit nervous, thinking about our political situation. Speaking about Deutch and the current political situation maybe you should read what he wrote after 911 in answer to the question What Now?.
  118. Crichton, Anyone? by rickshaf · · Score: 1

    Michael Crichton put forward this very idea in a recent novel of his, "Timeline". Despite the fact that his stuff finds its way into various slick "shoot'm-up" movies, the underlying books are incredibly well researched, and the reader can learn a lot from them. For example, "Jurassic Park" was a well-reasoned exposition on the folly of trying to understand or predict the behavior of large systems, and "State of Fear" was a brilliant look into the politics of big-time environmentalism. Please understand that I don't necessarily agree with everything Dr. Crichton writes. But he makes the reader ask tough questions and manages to teach the reader some math and science along the way. All his books are worth careful reading. This can be said about few authors.

  119. Which interpretation is "correct" doesn't matter by pbaer · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter if Copenhagen, many worlds or some other interpretation is "right" as they are merely models to try and explain the math of quantum physics. Their irrelevance is similar to the electron, we don't need *it* to make accurate predictions, although it can be helpful in visualising what is ocurring.

    --
    There are 11 types of people, those who know unary and those who don't.
  120. Not as many as you'd think. by Nazlfrag · · Score: 1

    Fry: So it's true, there is an infinite number of universes.
    Professor Hubert Farnsworth: No, just the two.
    Fry: Oh, well. I guess that's enough.

  121. Practical Use by thesteveco · · Score: 1

    Perhaps Microsoft used these equations in the latest version of Excel.

  122. Bohr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In your face, Bohr!

  123. If pareallel universe thing is* true by Martian_Kyo · · Score: 1

    then schizophrenics are like ...quantum astronauts.

    "My dreams have come true, I am an astronaut."

    *I am reading Robert Anton Wilson so I have great disdain for the word 'is' now, and the word 'true' as well.

  124. Everett was right in this Universe by nikkipolya · · Score: 1

    If Paul Everett was on the right track in this Universe does it mean he is on the wrong track in a parallel universe. Then this becomes a case recursive reasoning.

  125. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by garazy · · Score: 1

    If this is correct you would have never have written this as surely knowing this would have sent you to the next plane of intelligence already?

  126. So what does this mean? by Big+Nothing · · Score: 1

    "the Bush-like branching structure created by the universe splitting into parallel versions of itself can explain the probabilistic nature of quantum outcomes"

    So what does this mean in practice? Will we or won't we invade Iran?

    --
    SIG: TAKE OFF EVERY 'CAPTAIN'!!
  127. Where does the energy come from? by Effugas · · Score: 1

    The fundamental problem with Many-Worlds, as I see it, is that it's a source of infinite energy.

    Suppose time is quantized, and the universe runs at Planck Time intervals. Each Planck moment has a certain number of interactions, the particular one that occurs determining the preconditions to the next, to the next, etc, for all eternity.

    If all things that can occur do occur, then the amount of state -- information content -- energy in the multiverse is constantly increasing.

    Sure, Quantum Dynamics is weird, but when did it get to violate the Laws of Thermodynamics?

    1. Re:Where does the energy come from? by Teancum · · Score: 1

      This thought here regarding the conservation of energy is perhaps something that may lead to a more general understanding of the multiverse model.

      Keep in mind that one of the primary "facts" that lead to the development of the Theory of Relativity was the idea that the speed of light, as measured with the best instruments at the end of the 19th Century, was identical in all directions within the range of experimental error. Nearly all of Relativity is a result of keeping the speed of light as a constant instead of a variable.

      The Laws of Thermodynamics have proven themselves to not only be as fundamental as you can get in terms of scientific concepts, but have shown the general philosophy that nothing can be created nor destroyed on a fundamental level holds true as well... far beyond even the original thinking of those who proposed these laws in the first place. Conservation of information, mass-energy conversion, and other principles merely show that you need to dig deeper if you find a "leak" allowing these principles to be violated.

      So you are on the right track here, but it would require taking the concept of a many-worlds multiverse and trying to decide how that would relate to these Laws of Thermodynamics. Perhaps over time, and averaged out over both time and space, these multiverses "collapse" to form identical universes?

      From an Science Fiction viewpoint.... does squashing a bug accidentally if you time travel to pre-historic Earth mean that Nazi Germany will win WWII? Or that the earth is dominated by intelligent marsupials instead of intelligent primates? Does a multiverse model allow for time travel at all... aka John Titor type concepts requiring a multiverse in order to work?

      I am suggesting here that one way to solve this "problem" is to demonstrate how the universe as we see it does conserve energy and that these "virtual" universes average out over time to be functionally identical to what we currently see. Or perhaps another way to think of this is that there is also a conservation of multiverses as well that is merely an extention of the Laws of Thermodynamics. As a universe is created, it requires another universe to be "destroyed". Whatever that really means... you can use your own imagination here for fun.

    2. Re:Where does the energy come from? by Effugas · · Score: 1

      There could very well be a finite number of multiverses, each trading energy back and forth throughout their various threads of causality. But there can't be an infinite, ever branching count. The problem with a finite count of multiverses is at what rate does the universe branch, how many independent states are maintained, etc. I suspect the reality of managing information transfer across a finite number of universes is even more complex than the infinite variant, to the point where the single shared universe concept is in fact far more likely to reflect the real world.

  128. Consequences of Many Worlds by csrster · · Score: 1

    According to Deutsch's book The Fabric of Reality (iirc) one of the consequences of Many Worlds is that time travel is logically possible. You can travel back to a different parallel universe and it doesn't matter if you kill your grandfather there because you're not in the same universe you were born in. It's a far-fetched example but it shows that you can't rule out the possibility of a definitive test of Many Worlds.

  129. Precise definition of Occam's razor by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1
    This isnt a reponse to the parent poster, just felt like making sure people were on the same page.

    There are a lot of loose lazy understandings of occam's razor flying around on this thread. To be precise, Occam's Razor states that the explanation with the least number of arbitrary assumptions is the most likely to be correct.

    Not the most plausible, or the most intuitive, or even the most "simple" if we are being exact. Just the least number of arbitrary assumptions.

    This is because every arbitrary assumption you introduce has a chance of being wrong. So the more there are, the more chance your explanation is wrong.

    Of course, this is probabilistic and therefore is not guaranteed to indicate the definite correct explanation. But given no further information, it is the most prudent explanation to choose.

    The scientific approach to exploring other explanations is to introduce one arbitrary assumption, and devise various experiments to find evidence for that assumption. Should enough evidence be found to back it up, its no longer an arbitrary assumption, and we are back to an explanation with no arbitrary assumptions, and can safely add another and begin testing it.

    A lot of people decry Occams Razor as a refuge of the closed minded, but in reality it's just a sensible default on which to gradually build a more thorough explanation. In terms of directions of enquiry, it does not discriminate. If you want to say you lost your car keys because of a poltergeist, fine. Occams Razor says it's more likely you just misplaced them, but if you like the ghost idea, it doesnt tell you not to look for evidence of a poltergeist. And if you find the evidence Occams Razor shifts position to back you up.

    --
    (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
  130. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IMHO it is more like: "A cat has nine lives". You, one single you, walk down multiple paths simultaneously. When life sucks, you may be already gone in most every of the branches. No way you can meet some other self without merging the branches (so you both become yet again a single entity).
    Now when I think about it, it sheds another glimpse of light over true nature of entropy - it converges back to order (death) if you wait long enough!

    Happy worlds surfing...

  131. Falsifiability isn't all its cracked up to be by Mode_Locrian · · Score: 1

    Great post, parent. Your penultimate paragraph especially is right on the money. The falsifiability criterion always struck me as a bizarre one anyway. I know that Popper (its inventor) was motivated to come up with a criterion whereby enterprises like experimental physics would be classes as "science" and enterprises such as Freudian psychology would be classed as "non-science", which is fine, but the principle cannot extend that far.

    For one thing, as the parent points out, there are scientific "axiomatic" statements that cannot be shown to be false. In fact, this problem (if you think it is a problem) is not as isolated as the parent's post may suggest. The model of falsification that we have in mind looks something like this: We have a theory T that we want to test, so we derive from T some prediction about observable phenomenon O, and then we perform a test and see if O occurs. If O does not occur then, we conclude, T must be incorrect. Schematically, the model is just a modus tollens argument:
    If T, then O (derived prediction)
    Not O (we observe that the predicted phenomenon does not occur)
    Therefore, not T
    However, the problem is that no theory (excepting possibly some toy examples) is sufficient to entail, all by itself, any observational prediction. In order to derive any such observational prediction we will have to make additional assumptions about (e.g.) the way our instruments work, how the formulae of the theory are to be calculated and applied, the system of logic that we use to derive the predictions, etc. So, going back to the model, what we really have is something more like:
    If (T & A1 & A2 & A3 &...) then O
    Not O
    Therefore, not (T & A1 & A2 & A3 &...)
    But all this tells us is that at least one of those conjuncts is false (i.e. either T or A1 or A2 or...), but it can offer no insight as to which conjunct(s) is (are) the false one(s). Hence, if falsifiability requires that there be an observation that can deductively show that a theory is false, no theory is falsifiable. At best, we might say that *entire theoretical groups* can be falsifiable, but this is not particularly helpful since such theoretical groups will almost certainly include mathematics and logic as well.

    Additionally, even if the above problem (the so-called "underdetermination" problem) can be overcome, there is an additional serious problem with the falsifiability criterion; namely that it is not at all clear which observations are possible and which are not. It may seem that the only handle we have on possibility (other than what we've already done, of course) is what we can conceive of--if something is imaginable, or makes sense on imagining, then we might be inclined to say that it is possible. But notice that this involves a rather strange claim for a Popperian to make, namely that we somehow have this amazing facility of mind such that if we can imagine something, it really is possible and, if we cannot imagine it, then it isn't possible (because, recall, this is how we show that things like psychoanalysis are not science--we cannot conceive of any observation which would falsify it). But why should we suppose that we have such a tremendous faculty of mind? For one thing, the claim that conceivability entails possibility certainly isn't itself falsifiable...

  132. Too late... by bodland · · Score: 1

    The Republicans already proved the existence of Bizzaro World.

  133. niiiiiiice by tomzyk · · Score: 1

    add in some whiskey to that and i'll quit my server to join yours.
    waitaminute... damn. still having troubles distinguishing between reality and ffxi...

    --
    Karma: NaN
  134. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've died multiple times in my dreams (for example, a being shot point blank in the head with a .357 Magnum revolver). What was that you said about never dying in dreams?

  135. New? by Kim0 · · Score: 1

    And this is supposed to be new?
    I thought about this several years ago, when I studied physics.
    Particles typically describe world lines in the variants of Hilbert space that quantum mechanics use,
    with say 4 dimensions per particle in the universe. When interacting, such as a photon hitting a half
    transparent mirror, the world line described by that photons wave packet gets split in 2, and enough
    splitting like that will give a branching structure of waves in Hilbert space.

    In other words, the interacting particles in Fock space gives wavy structures that branches, as long as
    it is sufficiently for from thermal equilibrium.

    Kim0

  136. Reality check by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1
    First, this is unpublished work (i.e., there has been no formal peer review): it was presented at a conference.

    Deutsch himself did not present, according to the speakers list. The New Scientist mentioned his collaborators Wallace and Saunders, who presented the following talks:

    David Wallace
    Probability in the Everett interpretation: state of play

    I will review the current state of the probability problem. My main focus will be on the attempts by David Deutsch and myself to provide a proof of the Born Rule starting from Everettian assumptions, but I will also attempt to locate these attempts within the more general framework of the probability problem.

    Simon Saunders
    'The Everett interpretation

    I shall present an overview of quantum mechanics in the Everett interpretation, that emphasises its structural characteristics, as a theory of what exists. In this respect it shares common ground with other fundamental theories in physics. As such its appeal is conservative; it makes do with the purely unitary equations of quantum mechanics as exceptionless and universal. It also makes do with standard methods for extracting 'high level' or 'emergent' ontology, the furniture of macroscopic worlds, from largish molecules on up. It would appeal all the more if it made do with standard epistemological principles too - for example, in the context of inductive statistical confirmation, with standard Bayesian epistemology. But this links to the question of the interpretation of probability in the Everett interpretation, and here the theory seems anything but conservative. It is a common complaint that the approach leaves no room at all for talk of uncertainty. I shall argue, again on conservative interpretative practises, that this claim is incorrect. Chance events are, indeed, revealed in a surprising light - as quantum branchings - but they are the more perspicuous, and their properties and quantitative measure better explained, in light of that. Neither one of those abstracts sounds like it is giving any theoretical or experimental support to the "many worlds interpretation" over other interpretations. At best, they purport to show how MWI is compatible with probability theory — a far lesser claim.

    Indeed, it is impossible to give Everettian MWI any precedence over other interpretations, because by construction Everett made the MWI experimentally identical to conventional interpretations of QM.

    Deutsch is famous for claiming that MWI is empirically distinguishable from other interpretations, but again, this is not actually possible. You have to read the fine print. I read one of his books years ago where he made that claim, and IIRC there was some footnote which explained that he wasn't actually talking about Everett's MWI, but some modification of quantum mechanics he has proposed which is compatible "in spirit" with the actual MWI. Well, fair enough, but it's not really legitimate to claim that he's talking about the MWI anymore: he's talking about his own theory (which has no experimental support).
  137. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by trolltalk.com · · Score: 1

    The branches wouldn't merge - too many other things would be different to allow a merge to take place. For example, in one branch, Darl McBride is a scum-sucking bottom-feeder, and in another he becomes a lawyer ... oops - same diff - bad example :-)

  138. Bad pun by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    It happens to be that the answer to life, the universe and everything in that universe is 43

    Sounds like prime real estate to me.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    1. Re:Bad pun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      gah.

      you, sir, are going to dork hell.

      and so am I, as I laughed at that.

  139. Gory Details? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish they would have said WHAT mathmatical equations led to this proof, or at least served as further evidence. This article didn't really tell us anything new at all!

  140. MOD PARENT UP by Deef · · Score: 1

    Not enough people understand this about the Many Worlds interpretation. It really is a slightly different theory, with (in principle) testable consequences.

  141. The universe is a program by CirReal · · Score: 1

    'Wave functions', string theory, etc., is just an If-Then-Else loop. A particle keeps vibrating, representing endless possible outcomes, until variable 'x' changes indicating the act of observing and then the loop reaches a conclusion and the particle assumes the state represented by the condition it's in when observed. Endless possibilities until the particle is observed, loop is exited, and a final determination is made.

  142. Karma Re:Raises the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Karma.

    It's Karma.

  143. Yes means No. by sixside · · Score: 1

    But don't they also NOT exist then?

  144. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But there can be convergence. "You take the high road and I'll take the low road...", err, I mean if the outcome is the same for two branches and there is no inherent history influence from that point on, I'd call that a merge of the branches. A sort of what "strange attractors" do in chaotic systems - for certain domain of initial conditions, outcome is (infinitesimally almost, or exactly) the same. Information is created by existence, invocation of choices and destroyed by shrinking the number of possible outcomes (i.e. by revealing what choice was taken or in which subset of them the taken choice lies). It somehow fits well... "many worlds" would be just one single physical world, expanded by dimension of information. In other words, quantum mechanics is where physics meets (again) information science.

  145. Re:your sig by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    If you have an alternative way to reference the direct election of senators amendment that is shorter then what I just typed here I will be happy to use it thanks

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  146. Why do people... by Bloodoflethe · · Score: 1

    always forget that Occam's Razor requires all things to be equal? This means you need measurable results, something we don't have yet. It could be that for the measurable results the parallel universe bit is the simplest explanation. Who knows? Neither of us - that much is certain.

    --
    "Little is much when little you need."
  147. Re:Parallel Universes conflict with Mind-Body Prob by thecod · · Score: 1

    Life is like a dream.

    Better start rowing, rowing, rowing your boat.

    You never die in your observed life. You just die in alternate universes.

    You probably are referring to this:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_suicide

    IMO, if this metaphysical argument is valid any support for the many worlds interpretations would be pretty good news... What are your thoughts, ghost of Ben Franklin? http://www.drmcninja.com/