An unknowable unknown: I shot a rocket across the cosmic horizon. On the rocket was a qGrenade set to detonate on a timer. Did my Schrödinger’s rocket explode when the timer went off in my Everett branch?
Whether or not it’s meaningful, it’s certainly useful, especially by Phillip K. Dick’s definition: “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn’t go away.”
An unknowable unknown: I shot a rocket across the cosmic horizon. On the rocket was a qGrenade set to detonate on a timer. Did my Schrödinger’s rocket explode when the timer went off in my Everett branch?
I don’t see that decoherence would occur in that case.
This once again explains why “reality” is a largely meaningless concept.
Wow. I maybe understand where you are alluding to, but I’m not sure I’m reverse engineering the thoughts right. Explain for me?
Whether or not it’s meaningful, it’s certainly useful, especially by Phillip K. Dick’s definition: “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn’t go away.”