I used the linked resources and didn’t come off much wiser, but I guess regoing over he basics is only good. I guess it hammered home that there is convergence on the double slit experiment. However in all these things it’s a scenario where you start off in one world split it into multiple and then coverge to a result world. However in my understanding pure states are hard to prepare. There are a multiple worlds where we run the experiment a little later or in a little diffferent conditions. Won’t those worlds also have a chance to effect our experiment in addition to the “intra branch” interference?
There was a side mention that in multiple worlds there is a “branching structure”. I guess it might be characterise long distance behaviour but in short range convergent interference can play a big role?
You seem to dislike the QM sequence on LW. Besides those links (they’re quite short), is there anything else that you’d recommend to read instead of the QM sequence that would be as easy to understand for a layman and would offer significant insight on MWI position? In short, is there anything that would offer the same utility that the QM sequence offers, but in a better manner?
is there anything that would offer the same utility that the QM sequence offers, but in a better manner?
Well, Deutsch’s The Beginning of Infinity is consistently praised by practicing physicists and quantum information researchers, and it advocates MWI quite forcefully. There is a lot of speculative stuff there which is best read critically, just like in his first book, The Fabric of Reality, so it is a good exercise in recognizing when you are being fed a teacher’s password.
I’ve seen FAQs, and even linked one that looked good, but I cannot find that post with the search function, and I don’t want to go back a year or so and find it manually. That said, don’t expect many good ones.
1) QM is, believe it or not, difficult (big surprise, right?)
2) what needs to be said really depends on the directions your thoughts bend when being exposed to it—covering every blind alley that could screw someone up would slow everyone down to a crawl, unless you go very formally, and then see point 1 even more so.
Here is an MWI perspective from an actual physicist: http://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2014/02/12/the-many-worlds-of-quantum-mechanics/
A very thorough explanation of QM by Sean, much better quality than the QM sequence: http://preposterousuniverse.com/eternitytohere/quantum/
Relevant video debate: http://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2014/05/29/quantum-mechanics-smackdown/
Read/watch those first.
I used the linked resources and didn’t come off much wiser, but I guess regoing over he basics is only good. I guess it hammered home that there is convergence on the double slit experiment. However in all these things it’s a scenario where you start off in one world split it into multiple and then coverge to a result world. However in my understanding pure states are hard to prepare. There are a multiple worlds where we run the experiment a little later or in a little diffferent conditions. Won’t those worlds also have a chance to effect our experiment in addition to the “intra branch” interference?
There was a side mention that in multiple worlds there is a “branching structure”. I guess it might be characterise long distance behaviour but in short range convergent interference can play a big role?
You seem to dislike the QM sequence on LW. Besides those links (they’re quite short), is there anything else that you’d recommend to read instead of the QM sequence that would be as easy to understand for a layman and would offer significant insight on MWI position? In short, is there anything that would offer the same utility that the QM sequence offers, but in a better manner?
Actually, there is a subsequence which is pretty good: {An Intuitive Explanation of Quantum Mechanics}(http://lesswrong.com/lw/r6/an_intuitive_explanation_of_quantum_mechanics/).
Well, Deutsch’s The Beginning of Infinity is consistently praised by practicing physicists and quantum information researchers, and it advocates MWI quite forcefully. There is a lot of speculative stuff there which is best read critically, just like in his first book, The Fabric of Reality, so it is a good exercise in recognizing when you are being fed a teacher’s password.
I’ve seen FAQs, and even linked one that looked good, but I cannot find that post with the search function, and I don’t want to go back a year or so and find it manually. That said, don’t expect many good ones.
1) QM is, believe it or not, difficult (big surprise, right?)
2) what needs to be said really depends on the directions your thoughts bend when being exposed to it—covering every blind alley that could screw someone up would slow everyone down to a crawl, unless you go very formally, and then see point 1 even more so.