Nope, not really. With no math, the thing is, the different “branches” take up a fraction of the world. Classically you might say “If eating cake is 2 units of utility and not eating cake is 0 units, then a 50% chance of cake is 1 unit.” Quantum mechanically, you’d say “If eating cake is 2 units of utility and not eating cake is 0 units, then 50% of my current measure going to eating cake is 1 unit.”
Nope, not really. With no math, the thing is, the different “branches” take up a fraction of the world. Classically you might say “If eating cake is 2 units of utility and not eating cake is 0 units, then a 50% chance of cake is 1 unit.” Quantum mechanically, you’d say “If eating cake is 2 units of utility and not eating cake is 0 units, then 50% of my current measure going to eating cake is 1 unit.”
See Egan’s Law.