“Thread of subjective experience” was an aside (just one of the mechanisms that explains why we “find ourselves” in a world that behaves according to the Born rule), don’t focus too much on it.
The core question is which physical mechanism (everything should be physical, right?) ensures that you almost never will see a string of a billion tails after a billion quantum coin flips, while the universe contains a quantum branch with you looking in astonishment on a string with a billion tails. Why should you expect that it will almost certainly not happen, when there’s always a physical instance of you that will see it happened?
You’ll have 2^1000000000 branches with exactly the same amplitude. You’ll experience every one of them. Which physical mechanism will make it more likely for you to experience strings with roughly the same number of heads and tails?
In the Copenhagen interpretation it’s trivial: when the quantum coin flipper writes a result of the flip the universe somehow samples from a probability distribution and the rest is the plain old probability theory. You don’t expect to observe a string of a billion tails (or any other preselected string), because you who observes this string almost never exist.
“Thread of subjective experience” was an aside (just one of the mechanisms that explains why we “find ourselves” in a world that behaves according to the Born rule), don’t focus too much on it.
The core question is which physical mechanism (everything should be physical, right?) ensures that you almost never will see a string of a billion tails after a billion quantum coin flips, while the universe contains a quantum branch with you looking in astonishment on a string with a billion tails. Why should you expect that it will almost certainly not happen, when there’s always a physical instance of you that will see it happened?
You’ll have 2^1000000000 branches with exactly the same amplitude. You’ll experience every one of them. Which physical mechanism will make it more likely for you to experience strings with roughly the same number of heads and tails?
In the Copenhagen interpretation it’s trivial: when the quantum coin flipper writes a result of the flip the universe somehow samples from a probability distribution and the rest is the plain old probability theory. You don’t expect to observe a string of a billion tails (or any other preselected string), because you who observes this string almost never exist.
What happens in MWI?