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Before I state my question I want to say I am in no way an expert/professional in this field. I read quite a bit on the subject and I consider myself familiar with the basic concepts but I really want to hear an opinion from anyone who is more involved in that subject.

I have trouble fully understanding the fundamental difference between the Copenhagen Interpretation and the Many Worlds Interpretation of quantum physics in regard to the measurement problem, perceived reality and conscious observers. To me it seems like they are both just different framings of the same problems.

CI tells us, at the moment of measurement of a quantum bit in superposition, the wave function collapses and the probability of one of the possible outcomes becomes 1. MWI on the otherhand states the wave function never collapses but instead at the moment of measurement or decoherence, the system the qubit interacted with enters a superposition too and both possible realities exist perpendicular to each other (branching). However in each of these perpendicular realities the probability for one of the possible measurements just jumped to 1.

So the question of Why does a measurement cause collapse of the wave function? (CI) becomes Why only one of the perpendicular realities can be observed? (MWI). If I was ignorant and to say 'I don't care if perpendicular unobservable realities exists.' both seem very semilar to me and come down to the same questions: What exactly IS measurement?, Why can we only observe one of the possible realities? and What is the mechanism to decide which one we observe? (If there is any other than fundamental randomness)

So to all of you more familiar with the subject my question is: What problem is solved by the MWI (other than more elegant mathematics)? And what is fundamentally different between CI and MWI in regard to measurement, observed reality or even conscious experience?

Qmechanic
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flxh
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  • @Oliver Haha that is very nice. However I am sure there is a lot of detail I am missing here. So any answer providing some more detail will be greatly appreciated. :) – flxh Apr 05 '21 at 18:16
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    I don't want to discourage somebody from answering. But from reading similar questions here on PSE, I think most you will get is opinion, mainly because, apart from rephrasing the Copenhagen interpretation in terms of the physical quantities, MWI seems to add psychological stuff. I don't like the Copenhagen interpretation either, but at least it is economic in some sense. If there will ever be more physics behind QM, it will have to go beyond mere interpretation. Having said that, special relativity also started with the interpretation of an ether. So I will keep my mouth shut now. ;-) – oliver Apr 05 '21 at 18:48
  • "Why can we only observe one of the possible realities? and What is the mechanism to decide which one we observe?" -- I have no idea what this is supposed to mean. There is no principle to determine which one you observe because that question is perfectly meaningless. There is one you before the entanglement and then there are multiple yous. There is no sense in asking which one you would want to become -- they are all future versions of you. None of them carries some secret true essence of you more than the others. –  Apr 05 '21 at 19:39
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    @DvijD.C. Sure I understand what you are saying. And my question probably isn't phrased precisely enough. What I meant to ask: In our macrosopic reality we only experience one singular path in the tree that consist of every branching event. So instead of asking Why did the wave function collapse in the direction we just observed? (with CI) we could ask. Why did the path that describes our past went the way it did?... Sure every entangled version of me could ask the same question. But still there is only one of the possible paths realized for each observer. – flxh Apr 05 '21 at 20:12
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    I am not sure what exactly is your question. If you want to establish some equivalence between CI and MW, that is simply not possible. If your claim is that they both are equally bad then that's a matter of opinion as far as PSE is concerned. What exactly are you asking about physics that someone can objectively answer. "Are CI and MW equally distasteful?" is not one such question ;) -- and I say this as someone who does like opinion-based debates quite a lot in general. :) –  Apr 05 '21 at 20:18
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    Quite the opposite: I find both equally intriguing. My objective question is in the title: Does solve MW any QM problem that CI does not? Or are there just different framings for the 'deeper mysteries' of QM? As I said I am not an expert so thought I must be missing something when there are very smart people on each side defending their favourit QM interpretation so religously. Btw I really like to debate this stuff, too. :) – flxh Apr 05 '21 at 22:20

7 Answers7

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I’ll try to be brief. The Copenhagen interpretation can basically be reduced to two axioms:

  1. Most of the time, quantum states evolve in time according to the Schrodinger equation.
  2. When measurements occur, the state collapses onto an eigenstate of the quantum operator that is associated with the classical quantity being measured, with probability given by the Born rule.

Axiom (2) has seemed deeply unphysical ever since it was first proposed. To be fair, there are other things about QM (such as entanglement) that were probably even more objectionable to many physicists during the development of quantum mechanics. But axiom (2) seems ridiculous in the context of other physical theories. It is not deterministic; it involves the observer in the definition of reality itself; and the concept of a measurement is quite arbitrary, among other issues.

MWI is basically the idea that we just abandon axiom (2) and we still get the same observable physics. When Everett first proposed it, the idea was murky and almost as magical as axiom (2). But in the modern context of quantum decohrerence, there is nothing fishy at all.

Basically, the idea is that when you set up anything we might call a “measurement,” what is really happening is a series of entanglements. First, the quantum system becomes entangled with your macroscopic measuring device. Next, you look at the readout on the device, and your body and brain become entangled with both it and the original quantum system. Then you mention the results to your colleague, and he/she also becomes entangled. All of this happens through time evolution of the Schrodinger equation alone. (Look into decoherence for the mechanics of how this happens.) But the different parts of this wavefunction, corresponding to different measurements and different states of your brain and body, have decohered, so they effectively (from our human perspective) act like “parallel universes” that do not interact.

In this picture, there is one universal wavefunction, and its time evolution is completely deterministic. To MWI supporters, this fits “the character of physical law” (to use an unrelated phrase of Feynman’s) much more than axiom (2). And you get the same physics, as far as any current experiment can show.

But keep in mind that there are understandable reasons why detractors regard it as pseudoscience:

  1. As far as we know now, there are other interpretations that produce the same physics.
  2. MWI requires the existence of all of the other terms in the universal wavefunction with other copies of ourselves (i.e., the “parallel universe”). It can rightfully be claimed that in this sense, Copenhagen is simpler; it has an extra unphysical axiom, but only one observable “reality.”
sasquires
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    I forgot to mention, but the best book I know of for exploring these issues fairly rigorously at the non-expert level is David Albert’s Quantum Mechanics and Experience. – sasquires Apr 06 '21 at 05:45
  • Would anyone care to explain the downvote? – sasquires Apr 07 '21 at 01:42
  • Thank you for your detailed answer and for the book recommendation. I definitely try to get my hands on a copy. – flxh Apr 07 '21 at 14:10
  • I have been trying to read about the MWI but honestly an argument like this: "Then you mention the results to your colleague, and he/she also becomes entangled." seems a bit ridiculous to me. So if i read that the result of certain measurment was A in an article (online) i also become entangled? I think axiom (2) is way less complicated... – erni Feb 11 '23 at 12:43
  • @enri I think that there is probably a worldview mismatch here. When I was younger, I believed that everyone had a soul, and that experiences were experienced by the soul, and they had to be "real" in the sense that whatever experience you are having has a single well-defined value at all times. But now try adopting the following perspective instead. You and your colleague are big bunches of atoms that follow the Schrödinger equation. ... – sasquires Feb 13 '23 at 17:53
  • ... Then there is nothing complicated about those bunches of atoms being in an entangled state and being in a superposition of believing that, for example, the result of a spin measurement is "up" or "down." One could say that the whole problem of interpretations of quantum mechanics is that you have to figure out why exactly this scenario makes you squeamish. Once you do, you will probably have settled on an interpretation and the underlying philosophical assumptions that go with it. – sasquires Feb 13 '23 at 17:53
  • It occurred to me that you may just be uncomfortable with macroscopic objects being in superposition states. For example, this could be because people don't usually discuss this in QM courses or because it is a mathematically complex situation that doesn't have a nice pencil-and-paper solution. But if you look into the literature on quantum decoherence. – sasquires Feb 13 '23 at 17:57
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So the question of Why does a measurement cause collapse of the wave function? (CI) becomes Why only one of the perpendicular realities can be observed? (MWI).

It's not true that only one reality is observed in MWI. They're all observed, just not by the same people.

I think the question "Why only one of the perpendicular realities can be observed?" can be interpreted in two ways. It could be taken as a special case of the philosophical question "why am I me and not somebody else?" While I don't have a good answer to this question, it's not specific to MWI. The people in the other worlds aren't you (though some of them are very similar to you) and they have the same status with respect to this question as people in this world who aren't you.

One of the most common objections to MWI is that it can't explain why you're more likely to be a person who sees a more likely measurement outcome than a person who sees a less likely outcome. Again, this is a real problem, but not specific to the MWI. There is something rotten about all forms of anthropic reasoning, where you try to figure out the "probability that you're you", even when the other people you might be (but aren't) are just other people on Earth or intelligent aliens in another galaxy. Just like the problem of consciousness itself, no one knows how to solve this, but it can't be avoided (unless you give up and become a solipsist).

Alternately, you may be asking why people only experience certain outcomes, corresponding to eigenvectors of some Hermitian operator, and no one (in any world) experiences outcomes other than those. I can't answer that either without a physical model of conscious experience, but I want to make the point that there's no reason to expect it not to be that way. People often seem to expect distributivity or linearity to apply where it doesn't. In classical logic, $B(P\vee Q)$ is not equivalent to $BP\vee BQ$, where $B$ means belief. (I believe the number of hairs on my head is either odd or even, but I don't believe it's odd and I don't believe it's even.) In discussions of Schrödinger's cat, I often hear the word "ghostly", as though a photo of $\left( α \left|\text{live cat}\right\rangle + β \left|\text{dead cat}\right\rangle \right)$ should look like a pixelwise blend of a photo of a live cat and a dead cat. It just doesn't work that way. Whatever physical state equates to conscious experience doesn't work that way either, evidently.

And what is fundamentally different between CI and MWI in regard to measurement, observed reality or even conscious experience?

What MWI does that the collapse picture* doesn't do is attempt to be a complete model of reality. The collapse picture describes what happens to the wave function when a measurement corresponding to a particular Hermitian operator occurs, but it says nothing about when that process should be applied or which Hermitian operator should be used. It isn't clear in the collapse picture if measurements are "triggered" by something about the state of the world just prior to the measurement, or even what the state of the world is (it's not the wave function). MWI, in contrast, says that the wave function is the complete state of the world, that the times and nature of measurements are encoded in it, and that measurements occur "automatically" in the course of Hamiltonian evolution. Whatever you think of the viability of that model, at least it's a model.


* This is what you called the Copenhagen interpretation, but I think that's a bad name for it: see this answer.

benrg
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  • "I believe the number of hairs on my head is either odd or even, but I don't believe it's odd and I don't believe it's even." is only true if you can unambiguously define what "hair" is when counted but can you really do so without "abstraction"? What I mean is, say, does the thing on your scalp have to be at least 1cm or is it enough if 1mm long, how you define your scalp, etc.. Is that apple the same apple as the one whose surface was wet a second ago but now dry, or is it a different apple, etc.? The fuzziness is all over in observation and in definition. – hyportnex Apr 06 '21 at 17:06
  • This is not really true: "In classical logic, $B(P \vee Q)$ is not equivalent to $BP \vee BQ$, where B means belief." $B$ ("belief") is not a predicate for classical logic; it is not a "statement" or anything like it. For predicates, the distributive law you mentioned is correct. – sasquires Apr 07 '21 at 01:45
  • @benrg thank you very much for your detailed answer! So MWI excludes any non-deterministic assumptions, and allows for a deterministic model of the "quantum-macro-interaction"? Still one could argue that this does not really solve the measurement problem but just hands over the tricky bit to the philosophers by asking "Why were we experiencing/measuring the one outcome we did and not the other one?" , instead of "Why did the wave function collapse the way we measured it?" – flxh Apr 07 '21 at 13:54
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The answers posted earlier explain the motivation for considering the Many-Worlds Interpretation (MWI). The motivation can be summarized like this: The collapse interpretation is awful, and MWI doesn't have collapse, so MWI is better.

However, rejecting collapse is not the same as endorsing MWI, and rejecting MWI is not the same as endorsing collapse. Rejecting one interpretation is not the same as endorsing another one. Quantum theory can be formulated and used without committing to any "interpretation" at all, while fully preserving its ability to account for the known experimental facts.

In this answer, interpretation means any idea that can be classified as either $\psi$-ontic or $\psi$-epistemic. See this answer for the definitions. Briefly: $\psi$-ontic means that a given reality can only be consistent with one pure state, and $\psi$-epistemic means that a given reality can be consistent with two or more pure states.

Both collapse and MWI are $\psi$-ontic, but that's beside the point. The point is that we can formulate and use quantum theory without committing to any interpretation. Of course, if we don't commit to any interpretation, then the theory is manifestly incomplete. But it's incomplete in a way that experiments are currently unable to explore, and living with that kind of incompleteness is just business as usual in science. People might fear that not embracing one specific interpretation can make their presumptuous peers think that they're secretly favoring some other specific interpretation, but that's just a sociological problem. If a presumptuous peer can't understand the gaping difference between "quantum theory is incomplete" and "I love pilot-wave theory," that's their loss.

Still, I do think MWI helps with one practical problem. Formulating quantum theory in a way that doesn't commit to any interpretation (as defined above) is possible, but expressing things in that way can make them look unfamiliar, and that can deter people from reading it. As a compromise, I often use MWI langauge. It's a relatively familiar, concise, and memorable way to express some of the math. One could argue that using the collapse language achieves the same goal, but there is a difference: questions spawned by using the MWI language tend to be more productive than questions spawned by using the collapse language. Why? Probably because the ambiguity in the collapse idea is blatant (that's why it feels awful), whereas the ambiguity in MWI is more deeply buried (that's why it feels more elegant). By the time we've thought through things carefully enough to find the equivalant ambiguity in MWI, we're that much closer to realizing that experiments have not yet given us any compelling reason to embrace any specific interpretation. Maybe someday they will, but I'm not holding my breath.

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    That's exactly how I feel about that subject. There is ambiguity in both but you have to dive quite a bit deeper to realize that fact. I think they both can be valuable tools to communicate ideas about Quantum theory but it becomes problematic when one party claims the truth for itself... but that's not specific to quantum theory interpretations. :) – flxh Apr 07 '21 at 14:06
  • Copenhagen and many worlds interpretation make different predictions about the results of macroscopic interference experiments as explained in: https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/622860/is-the-many-worlds-interpretation-really-just-an-interpretation/622864?noredirect=1#comment1402414_622864.

    Not sure if that fact is consistent with everything in your answer or not.

    – Jagerber48 Apr 08 '21 at 19:47
  • @Jagerber48 I was careful to say "experiments have not yet given us any compelling reason" instead of "experiments will never give us any compelling reason." – Chiral Anomaly Apr 08 '21 at 22:58
  • What is it so "awful" about thinking that there is only one single reality and that satisfying Schrodinger's equation is a necessary condition for any possible future reality - but not a sufficient one? Isn't that basically what the Copenhagen Interpretation amounts to? – D. Halsey Nov 23 '22 at 19:31
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    @D.Halsey Thinking that quantum theory is incomplete is fine, a point that I tried to make in this answer. The idea that the act of observation magically causes a sudden change in reality is awful IMO (e.g., what does "sudden" mean, given that simultaneity is relative?), but that wasn't my point here. That was only meant to be a glib summary of a typical pro-MWI argument. My real point was that MWI still doesn't solve the underlying mystery, even though it does at least encourage people to think more carefully about what the mystery really is. – Chiral Anomaly Nov 26 '22 at 22:16
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The many worlds interpretation drops the collapse postulate from CI. This is good because CI does not quantitatively specify when exactly collapse happens. This means that, under CI, quantum mechanics is an INCOMPLETE physical theory. Because CI leaves us with an incomplete physical theory it does not solve the measurement problem.

MWI drops the collapse postulate and leaves us with unitary evolution of the wavefunction. This leaves us with a complete physical theory.

However, MWI does not solve the measurement problem either. This is because MWI does not explain the relationship between the physical state of the universe (described by the wavefunction) and our subjective experience. "Why do we only experience one situation when our physical brain is in a superposition of having experienced both?".

As an illustrative counterpoint which will explain my paragraph above better and also motivate the entire measurement problem. CI does*, under certain philosophical assumptions, explain the between the physical state of the universe and our subjective experience. It does this by ensuring humans brains are never in superpositions. This means those brains are in well-defined states. If we assume that mental states are 1:1 with physical states then, bam, we have a correspondence between the physical theory and our experience. This is the goal of any scientific theory.

In fact, this is the entire motivation for CI. Prior to CI we in fact had only bare quantum mechanics, unitary evolution. This is exactly what MWI is! The early physicists thinking about quantum mechanics understood that under unitary evolution we could have situations where macroscopic objects (like cats or human brains) could be in superpositions. If the brain is in a superposition of physical states, how do we explain the fact we only subjectively experience single outcomes? This would require a many-to-one mapping between mental states and physical states. This is philosophically uncomfortable so the CI literally, in an ad-hoc way, just says "no, this is not acceptable" and demands that the wavefunction collapses before this many-to-one mapping becomes necessary.

Note that above I am describing a framework for the mind which assumes a dualist framework and which assumes epiphenomenalism, which is the idea that mental states are "caused" by physical states but not vice-versa. Physicists and scientists in general find talking about this philosophical stuff to be taboo which I find sad because I think this mind-body correspondence is actually central to the measurement problem and both physics and philosophy of the mind could benefit greatly from having a close look. Also, I think that most physicists probably implicitly assume an epiphenomanalistic view of the mind.

To summarize: MWI fixes the physical incompleteness of CI. CI fixes the correspondence between physical and mental states which is not addressed by MWI. Neither provides a fully satisfactory physical theory.

Check out "Three Measurement Problems" by Tim Maudlin. Not sure if there's open access version. Also check out lots of stuff by Jeffry Barrett. The Quantum Mechanics of Minds and Worlds is good, along with the video on his webpage.

Jagerber48
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  • There is nice quote by Feynman in the Maudlin article you have referenced: "[We] always have had (secret, secret, close the doors!) we always have had a great deal of difficulty in understanding the world view that quantum mechanics represents. At least I do, because I'm an old enough man that I haven't got to the point that this stuff is obvious to me. Okay, I still get nervous with it... you know how it always is, every new idea, it takes a generation or two until it becomes obvious that there is no real problem. It has not yet become obvious to me that there's no real problem.... – hyportnex Apr 08 '21 at 20:25
  • ...I cannot define the real problem, therefore I suspect there's no real problem, but I'm not sure there's no real problem." – hyportnex Apr 08 '21 at 20:25
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(Answers so far are a bit different than what I think is techinically the right answer to the question. Historically, I do not believe the reduction of an axiom of CI was not why MWI was devised -- although I guess this is the main appeal of a lot of people who believe in it.)

Q: "What problem is the Many-Worlds Interpretation actually solving?"

A: The Wigner's friend paradox.

Everett was a student of Wigner, and Everett came up with MWI (called relative-state at the time) as a solution to Wigner's friend paradox. In the Wigner's friend paradox, it can be shown that there is a disagreement between the observations of observer making an measurement, and a second observer who is isolated from the first observer. Wigner's solution was that collapse must happen within the mind of the observer, while Everett's solution was the MWI.

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QM is standardly presented in two sets of axioms. The first set gives a description of the quantum state which evolves deterministically. The second set, describes what occurs on measurement of the quantum state. It collapses to an eigenstate of the observable. This is also an evolution, but unlike the first case, this evolution is not deterministic - it is non-deterministic.

Some physicists do not like this division into a kind of punctuated evolution where a state evolves deterministically, only to collapse indeterministically on measurement. It's worth notimg that in Rovelli's relational QM, all interactions are seen as measurements. Personally, I agree with this.

Many Worlds try to solve this by simply denying the collapse postulate. Personally, I think they are trying to solve a non-problem. There is no philosophical reason why nature should be deterministic in all its aspects. In fact, this question was raised early on with Aristotle recalling in his Metaphysics that some philosophers 'declare that chance is a cause'. Moreover, I don't think it has been emphasised enough that the collapse postulate also gives us a direction of time. It's notorious that classical physics, in the small, is agnostic about the direction of time. For example, Rudolf Haag writes in his book, Local Quantum Physics:

Replacing the word, 'measuring result' by 'event', it is clear with a high level of confidence, a flash on a scintillation screen, the blackening of a grain on a photographic plate, the death of a cat ... can be considered as facts irrespective of the presence of an observer. But can one isolate events with absolute precision? Can one describe the universe as a set of events increading in time? This would neccessitate the introduction of irreversibility on a fundamental scale and a revision of the concepts of space and time ...

Mozibur Ullah
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    It's not just that the collapse process seems unphysical, it's that there are different processes but no prescription for when each one should be applied, making the model incomplete. Also, I don't think it really gives you an arrow of time. You can argue that pre-measurement states are more spread out than post-measurement states (though that's only true relative to a preferred basis), but post-measurement states $|Ψ\rangle$ and pre-measurement states $e^{iHΔt}|Ψ\rangle$ aren't actually observable. What's observable are time-symmetric quantities like $|\langleΨ'|e^{iHΔt}|Ψ\rangle|^2$. – benrg Apr 06 '21 at 18:14
  • @berng: The collapse occurs when the measurement occurs. That seems pretty precise to me. Rudolf Haag actually points out in his book, Local Quantum Physics, that collapse gives a direction of time in the small. I only learnt of this recently, I had thought I was the only one to consider it, given that I haven't heard much mention of it elsewhere. – Mozibur Ullah Apr 06 '21 at 19:05
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    @MoziburUllah Another way of phrasing benrg's comment is that defining the term "measurement" is extremely problematic. (MWI does not face this problem in principle, but it does face the practical problem that a mathematical description of decoherence can be quite complicated in practice.) – sasquires Apr 07 '21 at 01:42
  • @sasquires: If measurements per se are problematic, why should measurement be any less problematic in Many Worlds? Measurements and interactions still occur in Many Worlds (but no collapse). Moreover, I find the many, many worlds in Many Worlds as being ontologically incredible. It seems that denying the collapse postulate in order to keep determinism at the expense of introducing many worlds is simply jumping from the frying pan into the fire. I think it ontologically more parsimonious to mix in some indeterminism with determinism. – Mozibur Ullah Apr 07 '21 at 02:38
  • The problems with measurements in the Copenhagen interpretation are numerous. How do you define when a measurement has occurred? Typically people say something like “When a quantum system interacts with a macroscopic measuring device.” So what is a measuring device? Basically every quantum system is coupled to an environment of some sort, but which ones count? And when exactly does the measurement and collapse occur? The Wigner’s friend and Schrödinger’s cat thought experiments were invented partially to illustrate how poorly defined these concepts are. – sasquires Apr 07 '21 at 05:40
  • MWI does not have to deal with this because it does not have special dynamics for measurements versus non-measurements. It only has one dynamical equation which is always true. This doesn’t explain everything, but along with decoherence, it basically does. But the point is that if you don’t have a rule for wavefunctions collapsing during measurements, then defining a measurement is merely a semantic problem rather than an ontological one. – sasquires Apr 07 '21 at 05:42
  • Your discomfort with the “ontologically incredible” many worlds is entirely understandable, as I noted in my answer. I disagree, but my disagreement isn’t based on evidence, so I will explain my position but won’t press the issue. In my mind, many scientific advances that involve a paradigm shift have resulted in similar discomfort, so I do not really trust this type of discomfort. It is hard for us to imagine today, but my understanding is that the Copernican Revolution was equally (if not more) disorientating when it happened. – sasquires Apr 07 '21 at 05:48
  • @sasquires: You assume that Many Worlds is a credible paradigm shift. It isn't. There was plenty of evidence for QM as a paradigm shift. There's very little for Many Worlds. Just because it is incredible, doesn't make it true. – Mozibur Ullah Apr 08 '21 at 11:13
  • @MoziburUllah My point in raising the Copernican Revolution was not to imply that there is overwhelming evidence for MWI. There isn’t. My point was that if the ontological implications is a physical theory make you uncomfortable, that is not a good argument against the theory. The Catholic Church also basically dismissed Copernicus and Galileo as “not credible” when they meant that the theory did not agree with their preconceived ideas about reality. – sasquires Apr 08 '21 at 18:25
  • If I had to state my own position, it would be something like this: “Based on the evidence alone, any of the major interpretations of QM could be correct. But if I had to guess by extrapolating from what we know about physics, I would guess that MWI is correct.” The reason I keep arguing with you is that your rejection of MWI seems to be much stronger than this, and there is no empirical reason for such an opinion. – sasquires Apr 08 '21 at 18:54
  • Finally, I forgot to mention this before, but your argument about the direction of time (whether or not it is correct) does not say anything about MWI. Replace “wavefunction collapse” with “decoherence” and you get the same effect. (If QM really is responsible for the arrow of time, then this may have implications for some theories, e.g., the de Broglie-Bohm theory, but I would have to think about it more.) – sasquires Apr 08 '21 at 19:00
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It's pity that hidden variables aren't mentioned. This isn't an interpretation of quantum mechanics but a whole new theory of some weird deterministic stuff behind the dynamics of the probabilities present in quantum theory. Obviously, the weirdness of the deterministic stuff is the drawback. You can't observe it though the effects are there. You can't observe it but you can describe the stuff mathematically. It's somehow more satisfying than inherent probability. At least, to me (and of course, to proponents of the stuff). So let write some words on this theory.
Louis-Victor-Pierre-Raymond de Broglie initially proposed the pilot wave, which is a physical wave corresponding to the wave function, and David Bohm, later on, devoted much of his work to the construction of a consistent (whatever that means) theory including such a wave. I think that Einstein would have liked the theory, as he couldn't stand the thought that god plays dies. If this direction of thought was given more attention at the beginning of the quantum mechanics tale then maybe that would be the prevalent picture today. Instead of the Copenhagen interpretation.
What does it entail? In the HV interpretation, the wave function is not just a mathematical entity (construct, object, device) to describe physical observations and calculate the probabilities to find these. The wave function is built out of hidden variables in a way reminiscent of the way that a gas or liquid influences the motion of a small particle (Brownian motion) suspended in it. The gas or liquid represents the wavefunction "surrounding" a particle (quantum field theory makes use of Brownian motion too: look here).
This physical wavefunction affects the particle continuously. The particle corresponding to the wave function is corresponding in a literal sense. The particle's position and velocity are well defined at any moment. They are continuously changing though, in accordance with the wave.
What exactly are these variables? Who knows? They are hidden! They are not made out of the same stuff as the stuff out of which the medium surrounding the Brownian particle is made. I'm not sure what Bohm (or van 't Hooft, a Dutch physicist well known in the realm of quantum field theory and advocate of hidden variables) has (had) in mind if one can ever imagine this.
The existence of local hidden variables was ruled out by Bell's experiment, which is an experiment involving quantum entanglement. Not surprisingly! After all, quantum entanglement is a non-local phenomenon. When a measurement is made, the physical correlate of the wave function influences a faraway particle (entangled with a particle on which an observation or measurement is made) instantaneously. This only goes to show how weird these hidden variables (particles?) behave. Note that the instantaneous influence on a faraway particle doesn't mean that the speed of light is superseded. No information is transmitted faster than this speed, though you might think that information about one particle is received by the other particle instantaneously. I remember I had a hard time explaining this to a professor of the philosophy of the sciences, who had even studied physics. I took a number of copies of a popular article to college about the 1982 experiment conducted by Alain aspect, another experiment in the entanglement arena (obviously, quantum entanglement is very sexy!). It's tempting to view the two specially separated particles as a whole (Bohm's most notable book is somewhat new-age-like called Wholeness and Implicate Order.
The hidden variables constitute the wave function. The collections of hidden variables (wavefunctions) collapse if they interact (by one of the spin-1 fields) with other collections of hidden variables. Here the comparison with Brownian particles can't be made, obviously. all the deterministic stuff can simultaneously collapse. One can even argue that spacetime itself constitutes hidden variables surrounding particles, though the concept will always be problematic due to the hidden quality.
One last thing. It was once said that the very act of observing makes the wave function collapse. If this were the case, then life never could have evolved. Everything in existence (before the arrival of humans) would have been in an evolving superposition, meaning that it would be impossible for whatever to evolve.