Is there any evidence for 1: “We value extra copies in other quantum branches”...?
Who does that? It seems like a crazy position to take—since those are in other worlds!
Rejecting a p(0.5) grenade is not “valuing copies in other quantum branches.” It is simply not wanting to die. Making such a decision while not knowing how the probabilty will turn out works just the same classically, with no multiple copies involved. Evidently the decision has nothing to do with “valuing multiple copies”—and is simply the result of the observer’s uncertainty.
Roughly equal up until the point where you are choosing what ‘positive difference’ means. While that is inevitably arbitrary it is arbitrary in a, well, positive way. While it does seem to me that basic self perpetuation is in some sense more fundamental or basic than any sophisticated value system I don’t endorse it any more than I endorse gravity.
If you ask what “existence in another Everett branch” means, it means at least that at some point it was “objectively” a probable option (“objectively” means you were not epistemically wrong about assigning them probability), so that, updatelessly, you should care about them.
The multiverse smears me into a messy continuum of me and not-me. In this “least arbitrary” of preference schemes, it is not at all clear what is actually being valued.
If you are saying that the MWI is just a way of visualising probability, then we are
back to:
“Making such a decision while not knowing how the probabilty will turn out works just the same classically, with no multiple copies involved. Evidently the decision has nothing to do with “valuing multiple copies”—and is simply the result of the observer’s uncertainty.”
Observers often place value on future possibilities that they might find themselves witnessing. But that is not about quantum theory, it is about observer uncertainty. You get precisely the same phenomenon in classical universes. To claim that that is valuing your future self in other worlds is thus a really bad way of looking at what is happening. What people are valuing is usually, in part, their own possible future existence. And they value that just the same whether they are in a universe with many worlds physics—or not. The values are nothing to do with whether the laws of physics dictate that copying takes place. If it turns out experimentally that wavefunctions collapse, that will have roughly zero impact on most people’s moral systems. They never valued other Everett worlds in the first place—so their loss would mean practically nothing to them.
The “many worlds” do not significantly interfere with each other, once they are remote elements in the superposition. A short while after they have split they are gone for good. There is usually no reason to value things you will never see again. You have no way to influence them at that stage anyway. Actually caring about what happens in other worlds involves counterfactuals—and so is not something evolution can be expected to favour. That is an obvious reason for so few people actually doing it.
Maybe—from the existence of this debate—this is some curious corner of the internet where people really do care about what happens in other worlds—or at least think that they do. If so, IMO, you folk have probably been misled—and are in need of talking down. A moral system that depends on the details of the interpretation of quantum physics? Really? The idea has a high geek factor maybe—but it seems to be lacking in common sense.
Purporting to care about a bunch of things that never happened, that can’t influence you and that you can’t do anything about makes little sense as morality—but looks a lot like signalling: “see how very much I care?” / “look at all the things I care about”. It seems to be an extreme and unbelievable signal, though—so: you are kidding—right?
ETA: I retract “detachment”. Why you don’ play Russian roulette? Because you could get killed. Why a magician plays Russian roulette? Because he knows he won’t. Someone who doesn’t value Everett branches according to their “reality mass” doesn’t win—no magician would play quantum Russian roulette. That you cannot experience being dead doesn’t mean that you are immortal. (And additionally, my preferences are over worlds, not over experiences.)
The thing is, the correct “expected utility” sum to perform is not really much to do with “valuing Everett branches”. It is to do with what you know—and what you don’t. Some things you don’t know—because of quantum uncertanty. However, other things you don’t know because you never learned about them, other things you don’t know becaue you forgot them, and other things you don’t know because of your delusions. You must calculate the expected consequences of your actions based on your knowledge—and your knowledge of your ignorance. Quantum uncertainty is only a small part of that ignorance—and indeed, it is usually insignificant enough to be totally ignored.
This “valuing Everett branches” material mostly seems like a delusion to me. Human decision theory has precious little to do with the MWI.
Take “not wanting to die” and extract the state which people are in if they do not in fact die. Alternately, consider what an observer who has not taken a “crazy position” may choose to value. Then consider the difference between ‘deep and mysterious’ and just plain silly.
Rejecting a p(0.5) grenade is not “valuing copies in other quantum branches.” It is simply not wanting to die.
You don’t seem to realise that under the many worlds interpretation, the probabilities of the different outcomes of quantum events correspond (roughly speaking) to the amplitudes assigned to different universes, each of which contains instances (i.e. ‘copies’) of you and everything else. In other words, under MWI there is no difference between ‘wanting to maximize your quantum probability of survival’ and ‘valuing copies of yourself in future quantum branches’.
[Note that I’ve substituted the word future for other. Whether A = “you at time t0” cares about B and C = “two different copies of you at time t1″, both of which are ‘descendants’ of A, is a somewhat different question from whether B cares about C. But this difference is orthogonal to the present debate.]
If you want to simply deny the MWI then fine but you should acknowledge that that’s ultimately what you’re disagreeing with. (Also, personally I would argue that the only alternatives to the MWI are either (a) incoherent like Copenhagen (b) unparsimonious like Bohm’s interpretation or (c) contain unmotivated deviations from the predictions of orthodox quantum mechanics (like the GRW theory).)
The phenomenon has nothing to do with quantum theory. You get the same result if the grenade depends on a coin toss—and the grenade recipient is ignorant of the result. That is the point I just explained.
The behaviour isn’t the result of valuing copies in other worlds—it is simply valuing your own existence under conditions of uncertainty. The same behaviour would happen just fine in deterministic classical universes with no copying. So, the phenomenon has nothing to do with valuing copies—since it happens just the same regardless of whether the universe makes copies or not.
What Wei Dai means by “valuing extra copies in other quantum branches” is two things:
(Weak version:) The fact that A values B and C, where B and C are possible ‘future selves’ of A.)
(Strong version:) The fact that B values C, where C is B’s “counterpart in a quantum counterfactual world”.
Now, there’s an argument to be had about whether (2) should be true, even assuming (1), but right now this simply muddies the waters, and it will be much clearer if we concentrate on (1).
So, A valuing his own continued existence means A wanting it to be true that B and C, his possible future selves (in different counterfactual worlds), are both alive. A would not be very happy with B being dead and C being alive, because he would say to himself “that means I have (e.g.) a 1⁄2 chance of dying”. He’d much rather that B and C were both alive.
However, A might think like this: “If the Many Worlds Interpretation is true then it’s wrong to say that either B or C but not both will exist. Rather, both of them exist independently in separate universes. Now, what’s important to me is that my mind continues in some form. But I don’t actually need both B and C for that to happen. So if Roko offered me $100 in exchange for the instantaneous, painless death of B I’d quite happily accept, because from my perspective all that will happen is that I’ll receive the $100.”
Presumably you disagree with this reasoning, right? Even if MWI is true? Well, the powerful intuition that causes you to disagree is what Wei is talking about. (As he says, giving up that intuition is the position of “quantum immortality”.)
The fact that Wei states “the strong version” when “the weak version” would have sufficed is unfortunate. But you will completely miss the point of the debate if you concentrate solely on the difference between the two versions.
Er, what evidence exactly am I supposed to be updating on?
The supplied evidence for 1 (“We value extra copies in other quantum branches”) seems feeble. Most people are totally ignorant of the MWI. Most people lived before it was invented. Quantum theory is mostly an irrelevance—as far as people’s values goes. If—astonishingly—evidence of wavefunction collapse was ever found, people would carry on caring about things much as before—without any breakdown of morality—despite the loss of practially everything in other worlds. That thought experiment seems to demonstrate that most people care very little about copies of themselves in other worlds—since they would behave much the same if scientists discovered that those worlds did not exist.
Maybe there are somewhere a bunch of people with very odd values, who actually believe that they really do value copies of themselves in other worlds. I can think of at least one fellow who thinks like that—David Pearce. However, if so, this hypothetical silent mass of people have not stood up to be counted here.
We can construct less intuitive setup. You have created 99 copies of self.
Then every copy gets fake grenade (which always gives $100). Original you get real grenade. After explosion/nonexplosion remaining “you”s are merged. Will you accept next grenade in that setup?
Can I sum it as: if you know that “backup copies” exist then it’s OK to risk being exploded?
Do you care for being backed up in all Everett branches then? Or is it enough to backup in branch where grenade explodes?
The usual idea of a “backup” is that it can be used to restore from if the “original” is lost or damaged. Everett worlds are not “backups” in that sense of the word. If a quantum grenade kills someone, their grieving wife and daughters are not consoled much by the fact that—in other Everett worlds—the bomb did not go off. The supposed “backups” are inaccessible to them.
This apparently has little to do with valuing “extra copies in other quantum branches” though—there is no “Everett merge” procedure.
While for the purposes of this discussion it makes no difference, my understanding is that the “Everett branches” form more of a mesh if you look at them closely. That is, each possible state for a world can be arrived at from many different past states, with some of those states themselves sharing common ancestors.
Yes, entropy considerations make recombining comparatively rare. Much like it’s more likely for an egg to break than to recombine perfectly. Physical interactions being reversible in principle doesn’t mean we should expect to see things reverse themselves all that often. I doubt that we have a substantial disagreement (at least, we don’t if I take your reference to be representative of your position.)
Is there any evidence for 1: “We value extra copies in other quantum branches”...?
Who does that? It seems like a crazy position to take—since those are in other worlds!
Rejecting a p(0.5) grenade is not “valuing copies in other quantum branches.” It is simply not wanting to die. Making such a decision while not knowing how the probabilty will turn out works just the same classically, with no multiple copies involved. Evidently the decision has nothing to do with “valuing multiple copies”—and is simply the result of the observer’s uncertainty.
Me. Valuing existence in as much Everett branch as possible sounds like one of the least arbitrary preferences one could possibly have.
Whose existence? It’s question begging to assume that all copies share the same existence.
How does it compare to wanting to make a large positive difference in as many Everett branches as possible?
Roughly equal up until the point where you are choosing what ‘positive difference’ means. While that is inevitably arbitrary it is arbitrary in a, well, positive way. While it does seem to me that basic self perpetuation is in some sense more fundamental or basic than any sophisticated value system I don’t endorse it any more than I endorse gravity.
Valuing existence?!? I have no idea what that means. The existence—of what?
The existence of valuing, at least ;-)
If you ask what “existence in another Everett branch” means, it means at least that at some point it was “objectively” a probable option (“objectively” means you were not epistemically wrong about assigning them probability), so that, updatelessly, you should care about them.
The multiverse smears me into a messy continuum of me and not-me. In this “least arbitrary” of preference schemes, it is not at all clear what is actually being valued.
If you are saying that the MWI is just a way of visualising probability, then we are back to:
“Making such a decision while not knowing how the probabilty will turn out works just the same classically, with no multiple copies involved. Evidently the decision has nothing to do with “valuing multiple copies”—and is simply the result of the observer’s uncertainty.”
Observers often place value on future possibilities that they might find themselves witnessing. But that is not about quantum theory, it is about observer uncertainty. You get precisely the same phenomenon in classical universes. To claim that that is valuing your future self in other worlds is thus a really bad way of looking at what is happening. What people are valuing is usually, in part, their own possible future existence. And they value that just the same whether they are in a universe with many worlds physics—or not. The values are nothing to do with whether the laws of physics dictate that copying takes place. If it turns out experimentally that wavefunctions collapse, that will have roughly zero impact on most people’s moral systems. They never valued other Everett worlds in the first place—so their loss would mean practically nothing to them.
The “many worlds” do not significantly interfere with each other, once they are remote elements in the superposition. A short while after they have split they are gone for good. There is usually no reason to value things you will never see again. You have no way to influence them at that stage anyway. Actually caring about what happens in other worlds involves counterfactuals—and so is not something evolution can be expected to favour. That is an obvious reason for so few people actually doing it.
Maybe—from the existence of this debate—this is some curious corner of the internet where people really do care about what happens in other worlds—or at least think that they do. If so, IMO, you folk have probably been misled—and are in need of talking down. A moral system that depends on the details of the interpretation of quantum physics? Really? The idea has a high geek factor maybe—but it seems to be lacking in common sense.
Purporting to care about a bunch of things that never happened, that can’t influence you and that you can’t do anything about makes little sense as morality—but looks a lot like signalling: “see how very much I care?” / “look at all the things I care about”. It seems to be an extreme and unbelievable signal, though—so: you are kidding—right?
Since you are writing below my post and I sense detachment from what I’ve tried to express, I refer you to my http://lesswrong.com/lw/2di/poll_what_value_extra_copies/27ee and http://lesswrong.com/lw/2e0/mwi_copies_and_probability/27f1 comments.
ETA: I retract “detachment”. Why you don’ play Russian roulette? Because you could get killed. Why a magician plays Russian roulette? Because he knows he won’t. Someone who doesn’t value Everett branches according to their “reality mass” doesn’t win—no magician would play quantum Russian roulette. That you cannot experience being dead doesn’t mean that you are immortal. (And additionally, my preferences are over worlds, not over experiences.)
The thing is, the correct “expected utility” sum to perform is not really much to do with “valuing Everett branches”. It is to do with what you know—and what you don’t. Some things you don’t know—because of quantum uncertanty. However, other things you don’t know because you never learned about them, other things you don’t know becaue you forgot them, and other things you don’t know because of your delusions. You must calculate the expected consequences of your actions based on your knowledge—and your knowledge of your ignorance. Quantum uncertainty is only a small part of that ignorance—and indeed, it is usually insignificant enough to be totally ignored.
This “valuing Everett branches” material mostly seems like a delusion to me. Human decision theory has precious little to do with the MWI.
Take “not wanting to die” and extract the state which people are in if they do not in fact die. Alternately, consider what an observer who has not taken a “crazy position” may choose to value. Then consider the difference between ‘deep and mysterious’ and just plain silly.
FWIW, after this “explanation”, I am none the wiser.
You don’t seem to realise that under the many worlds interpretation, the probabilities of the different outcomes of quantum events correspond (roughly speaking) to the amplitudes assigned to different universes, each of which contains instances (i.e. ‘copies’) of you and everything else. In other words, under MWI there is no difference between ‘wanting to maximize your quantum probability of survival’ and ‘valuing copies of yourself in future quantum branches’.
[Note that I’ve substituted the word future for other. Whether A = “you at time t0” cares about B and C = “two different copies of you at time t1″, both of which are ‘descendants’ of A, is a somewhat different question from whether B cares about C. But this difference is orthogonal to the present debate.]
If you want to simply deny the MWI then fine but you should acknowledge that that’s ultimately what you’re disagreeing with. (Also, personally I would argue that the only alternatives to the MWI are either (a) incoherent like Copenhagen (b) unparsimonious like Bohm’s interpretation or (c) contain unmotivated deviations from the predictions of orthodox quantum mechanics (like the GRW theory).)
The phenomenon has nothing to do with quantum theory. You get the same result if the grenade depends on a coin toss—and the grenade recipient is ignorant of the result. That is the point I just explained.
The behaviour isn’t the result of valuing copies in other worlds—it is simply valuing your own existence under conditions of uncertainty. The same behaviour would happen just fine in deterministic classical universes with no copying. So, the phenomenon has nothing to do with valuing copies—since it happens just the same regardless of whether the universe makes copies or not.
OK, I’ll try again, from the beginning:
What Wei Dai means by “valuing extra copies in other quantum branches” is two things:
(Weak version:) The fact that A values B and C, where B and C are possible ‘future selves’ of A.)
(Strong version:) The fact that B values C, where C is B’s “counterpart in a quantum counterfactual world”.
Now, there’s an argument to be had about whether (2) should be true, even assuming (1), but right now this simply muddies the waters, and it will be much clearer if we concentrate on (1).
So, A valuing his own continued existence means A wanting it to be true that B and C, his possible future selves (in different counterfactual worlds), are both alive. A would not be very happy with B being dead and C being alive, because he would say to himself “that means I have (e.g.) a 1⁄2 chance of dying”. He’d much rather that B and C were both alive.
However, A might think like this: “If the Many Worlds Interpretation is true then it’s wrong to say that either B or C but not both will exist. Rather, both of them exist independently in separate universes. Now, what’s important to me is that my mind continues in some form. But I don’t actually need both B and C for that to happen. So if Roko offered me $100 in exchange for the instantaneous, painless death of B I’d quite happily accept, because from my perspective all that will happen is that I’ll receive the $100.”
Presumably you disagree with this reasoning, right? Even if MWI is true? Well, the powerful intuition that causes you to disagree is what Wei is talking about. (As he says, giving up that intuition is the position of “quantum immortality”.)
The fact that Wei states “the strong version” when “the weak version” would have sufficed is unfortunate. But you will completely miss the point of the debate if you concentrate solely on the difference between the two versions.
Tim sometimes morphs into an “I won’t update” bot during debates.
Er, what evidence exactly am I supposed to be updating on?
The supplied evidence for 1 (“We value extra copies in other quantum branches”) seems feeble. Most people are totally ignorant of the MWI. Most people lived before it was invented. Quantum theory is mostly an irrelevance—as far as people’s values goes. If—astonishingly—evidence of wavefunction collapse was ever found, people would carry on caring about things much as before—without any breakdown of morality—despite the loss of practially everything in other worlds. That thought experiment seems to demonstrate that most people care very little about copies of themselves in other worlds—since they would behave much the same if scientists discovered that those worlds did not exist.
Maybe there are somewhere a bunch of people with very odd values, who actually believe that they really do value copies of themselves in other worlds. I can think of at least one fellow who thinks like that—David Pearce. However, if so, this hypothetical silent mass of people have not stood up to be counted here.
We can construct less intuitive setup. You have created 99 copies of self.
Then every copy gets fake grenade (which always gives $100). Original you get real grenade. After explosion/nonexplosion remaining “you”s are merged. Will you accept next grenade in that setup?
I would be fine with that—assuming that the copies came out with the extra money; that the copying setup was reliable, etc.
This apparently has little to do with valuing “extra copies in other quantum branches” though—there is no “Everett merge” procedure.
Can I sum it as: if you know that “backup copies” exist then it’s OK to risk being exploded? Do you care for being backed up in all Everett branches then? Or is it enough to backup in branch where grenade explodes?
The usual idea of a “backup” is that it can be used to restore from if the “original” is lost or damaged. Everett worlds are not “backups” in that sense of the word. If a quantum grenade kills someone, their grieving wife and daughters are not consoled much by the fact that—in other Everett worlds—the bomb did not go off. The supposed “backups” are inaccessible to them.
Kirk and Scotty would say yes.
While for the purposes of this discussion it makes no difference, my understanding is that the “Everett branches” form more of a mesh if you look at them closely. That is, each possible state for a world can be arrived at from many different past states, with some of those states themselves sharing common ancestors.
Maybe—but that is certainly not the conventional MWI—see:
“Why don’t worlds fuse, as well as split?”
http://www.hedweb.com/manworld.htm#fuse
Yes, entropy considerations make recombining comparatively rare. Much like it’s more likely for an egg to break than to recombine perfectly. Physical interactions being reversible in principle doesn’t mean we should expect to see things reverse themselves all that often. I doubt that we have a substantial disagreement (at least, we don’t if I take your reference to be representative of your position.)
Yes. Every person who says they don’t want to commit quantum suicide is giving such evidence.