The Markus Müller paper you link you was interesting. I think he goes a little too wild with it, running into the old trap of quantum immortality / computational immortality. You can’t just count future instances of yourself without tracking what actually happens to present instances of yourself—or you can, it’s just a bad way to make decisions.
I agree. I don’t think he had to attempt to address this problem, if it may be addressed at all.
He has since taken into account the work of experimentalists doing related work, that validates his thesis of Quantum Theory essentially predicting what an observer will see next:
The Markus Müller paper you link you was interesting. I think he goes a little too wild with it, running into the old trap of quantum immortality / computational immortality. You can’t just count future instances of yourself without tracking what actually happens to present instances of yourself—or you can, it’s just a bad way to make decisions.
I agree. I don’t think he had to attempt to address this problem, if it may be addressed at all.
He has since taken into account the work of experimentalists doing related work, that validates his thesis of Quantum Theory essentially predicting what an observer will see next: