No, the onus is on you to show that TiLiABiNT is better than TiLiRuBaBiNT, if you want me to adopt any specific interpretation. Until then, I will happily use the relevant math without worrying whether the rubber bands are magical or sapient.
Right, but now let’s imagine a world in which you heard TiLiABiNT (henceforth: angel theory) before you heard TiLiRuBaBiNT (henceforth: rubber theory)..Might you not equally be arguing “No, the onus is on you to show that rubber theory is better than angel theory”?
If your decision process when faced with competing, equally supported theories is simply to stick with whichever one you happened to hear first, if you deny that (quantified) application of Occam’s Razor is a worthwhile tool to apply to competing theories that explain observations equally well, then you open yourself to holding beliefs with many useless, nonfunctional extra attachments stuck on. You could just as easily have heard angel theory before rubber theory. You want a mind that would settle on the less ridiculous of the two regardless of what order it heard them in.
The costs to switch beliefs are sometimes high. In particular, changing scientific theories is very costly in terms of retraining, revising textbooks and curricula, trying to figure out which past results are still meaningful and which are now incoherent, etc. I am prepared to tolerate a certain amount of theoretical cruft for the sake of having old research papers remain readily readable.
MWI vs collapse theories is an interesting case in point. There doesn’t seem to be a simple and clean way to derive the Born Rule in MWI. From a practical point of view, it’s much better to just stipulate the Born rule—to say that we can ignore any part of the wave function that didn’t match with our measurement—than it is to assume this exponentially* growing entangled state that we will never perceive. It might be that MWI is simpler in some sense, but talking about “collapse” is a much clearer way to explain what we are really doing mathematically.
Right, but now let’s imagine a world in which you heard TiLiABiNT (henceforth: angel theory) before you heard TiLiRuBaBiNT (henceforth: rubber theory)..Might you not equally be arguing “No, the onus is on you to show that rubber theory is better than angel theory”?
If your decision process when faced with competing, equally supported theories is simply to stick with whichever one you happened to hear first, if you deny that (quantified) application of Occam’s Razor is a worthwhile tool to apply to competing theories that explain observations equally well, then you open yourself to holding beliefs with many useless, nonfunctional extra attachments stuck on. You could just as easily have heard angel theory before rubber theory. You want a mind that would settle on the less ridiculous of the two regardless of what order it heard them in.
The costs to switch beliefs are sometimes high. In particular, changing scientific theories is very costly in terms of retraining, revising textbooks and curricula, trying to figure out which past results are still meaningful and which are now incoherent, etc. I am prepared to tolerate a certain amount of theoretical cruft for the sake of having old research papers remain readily readable.
MWI vs collapse theories is an interesting case in point. There doesn’t seem to be a simple and clean way to derive the Born Rule in MWI. From a practical point of view, it’s much better to just stipulate the Born rule—to say that we can ignore any part of the wave function that didn’t match with our measurement—than it is to assume this exponentially* growing entangled state that we will never perceive. It might be that MWI is simpler in some sense, but talking about “collapse” is a much clearer way to explain what we are really doing mathematically.
*I am using the word in its precise sense.