Single-world interpretation, 7

One consequence is that every observation can be thought of as causing the combined observer-object’s wavefunction to change into a quantum superposition of two or more non-interacting branches, or split into many “worlds”.

— Wikipedia on Many-worlds interpretation

That is incorrect.

Let’s consider the double-slit experiment. For simplicity, we regard the event “a person reads the device reading” as a classical event.

Before installing the measuring device, we do not know which slit a photon goes through. The photon state is in a superposition of eigenstates: 

| photon > = a | left > + b | right >

(According to the meaning of probability, |a|^2 + |b|^2 = 1.) In other words, if we send enough such kind of photons through the double-slit apparatus, we get the interference pattern. 

After installing the measuring device, we know which slit a photon goes through. According to the Copenhagen interpretation, when the photon passes through the double-slit apparatus, the photon-state “collapses” to one of the two eigenstates, such as | left >. However, a more accurate point of view is that, according to the quantum decoherence interpretation, the photon-and-device state becomes a superposition of a lot of eigenstates. Most of such eigenstates are corresponding to the macrostate of passing-through-the-left-slit, |left>_macro_state. 

The above many-worlds-interpretation statement assumes that there is a |right>_macro_state.

It is true in a sense that, since the photon-and-device involves a lot of particles, there are so many eigen-microstates. Some are certainly corresponding to the |right>_macro_state.

It is false in a sense that the weighting of the |right>_macro_state is so small that such macrostate is not meaningful in a macroscopic context, for example:

| photon-and-device > = 10^23 |left>_macro_state + 0.001 |right>_macro_state + other possible macrostates

— Me@2012-04-07 11:03:12 AM

2012.04.09 Monday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK

Single-world interpretation, 6.5

If this is the case, then wave function is deterministic. There is no free will. The free will is due to the ongoing superposition of eigenstates. Locally, we see superposition of “a and b” collapse to (such as) a. Globally, we also see b “goes to” the environment. Nothing is lost in a sense that no information is lost.

Then what happens when you make a choice by collapsing a wave function?

Free will, like wave function collapse, is a local illusion.

Since information cannot be lost, we always exist.

— Me@2011.11.20

2012.02.25 Saturday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK

Single-world interpretation, 6.2

In the Many-worlds interpretation (MWI), when we say that “a + b” collapses to “a”, there is a shift of definition of “you”.

MWI is in one sense correct: choice b version of you still exists. But the trick is that he is not in another universe. He is in the environment of this universe.

And perhaps in reverse, you are also part of the environment of him.

— Me@2011.11.20

2012.02.22 Wednesday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK

Single-world interpretation, 5

Wave function collapse is a process of losing the superposition information to the environment.

— Me@2011.11.20

The unchosen choices are lost to the environment.

— Me@2011.11.21

Nature never forgets about any correlations: …

— Lubos Motl

The alternative “universes” are in this universe’s environment.  

— Me@2012.01.27

2012.01.28 Saturday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK

本體現象意識

你可以想像一下,現世以後的世界有多神奇。我相信一個人過身以後,會以另一種形式、另一種意識存在。

可能所謂的「終後世界」,根本就是我們在生時的物理世界。只不過是我們的意識改變了,我們對同一個客觀世界的主觀知覺有所改變,令到我們感受得到一些在物理世界原本存在,但是生時感受不到的東西。

這只是猜測,不宜過分認真。

— Me@2011.02.21

2011.02.22 Tuesday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK 

Memento 3 E

電腦輪迴觀 3 E

Reincarnation is a process of “Memento”.

If reincarnation does exist, the cause of most people do not know the meaning of life is that they have forgotten what has happened before their current lives.

Studying history is a good way to reduce this problem.

– Me@2011.02.15

2011.02.17 Thursday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK

Memento 2

Physics and Love 2

.

What can you take when you die?

Your Love and your Physics.

.

1. Do recite the important parts so that you can keep your research after this life.

2. Write as much and as good as I can so that I can save the materials in humanity so that I can get them back when I come back.

– Me@2008.05.03

– Me@2011.02.15

.

.

2011.02.17 Thursday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK

Lessons from the Light

My answer is that you would be a truly free person. You would be forever liberated from the tyranny of others’ opinions, from self-doubt, from the fear of life and the fear of death, and from the demands of time.

Instead, you would be free to enjoy life as it is and to find fulfillment and joy in helping others.

— Kenneth Ring’s Lessons from the Light

I sometimes want to be a teacher but think my teaching role can best be by my example — not by class or going to find students.

— Kenneth Ring’s Lessons from the Light

1. Not everything in this book is correct. Read it with a critical mind.

2. There is a copy of this book in the Hong Kong Public Library.

3. There are more than one book called “Lessons from the Light”, written by different people. The one I mentioned is written by “Kenneth Ring”.

— Me@2010.08.28

2010.08.28 Saturday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK

電腦輪迴觀

靈魂軟件論

自我虛級化

Self-de-centralization

當年,買了第一部電腦時,以為我會與它一生一世。

漸漸,我發現電腦會壞。即使不壞,也會過時。

所以,每隔幾年,就需要換一部新電腦。

但是,我和舊電腦分開時,不會傷感,因為在分開前,我都會把所有重要的程式和資料儲蓄下來,留待重新裝載在新的電腦中。

舊電腦的硬件雖毀,但它們軟件(程式和資料)與我常在(,只要我記得定時備份(backup)的話)。

— Me@2010.07.27

2010.07.30 Friday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK