The Many Worlds Interpretation of QM

Author(s):  
Robert C. Koons
Wilmott ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (105) ◽  
pp. 10-11
Author(s):  
Aaron Brown

Phronesis ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-139 ◽  
Author(s):  

AbstractTwo readings of the much-discussed περιτρoπη argument of Theaetetus 170c-171c have dominated the literature. One I call "the relativity reading". On this reading, the argument fails by ignoratio elenchi because it "carelessly" omits "the qualifications 'true for so-and-so' which [Protagoras'] theory insists on" (Bostock 1988: 90). The other reading I call "the many-worlds interpretation". On this view, Plato's argument succeeds in showing that "Protagoras' position becomes utterly self-contradictory" because "he claims that everyone lives in his own relativistic world, yet at the same time he is forced by that very claim to admit that no one does" (Burnyeat 1976b: 48). I discuss and criticise both readings, and present a third, according to which the point of the argument is, very roughly, that Protagoras is committed to equating truth and truth-for, and so, further, to their intersubstitutability. This further commitment proves fatal to his argument.


Author(s):  
Joaquin Trujillo

The articles provides a phenomenological reading of the Many-Worlds Interpretation (MWI) of quantum mechanics and its answer to the measurement problem, or the question of “why only one of a wave function’s probable values is observed when the system is measured.” Transcendental-phenomenological and hermeneutic-phenomenological approaches are employed. The project comprises four parts. Parts one and two review MWI and the standard (Copenhagen) interpretation of quantum mechanics. Part three reviews the phenomenologies. Part four deconstructs the hermeneutics of MWI. It agrees with the confidence the theory derives from its (1) unforgiving appropriation of the Schrödinger equation and (2) association of branching universes with the evolution of the wave function insofar as that understanding comes from the formalism itself. Part four also reveals the hermeneutical shortcomings of the standard interpretation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minseong Kim

The question of how to make sense of probability in the many-worlds interpretation is a controversial and difficult one. Conventional literature attempts to provide a correct way of assigning probability to each world in the universe of many worlds. Differing from these attempts, it is argued that probability ambiguity in the many-worlds interpretation is not a curse but a blessing, allowing us to study quantum phenomena in terms of conventional thermodynamics, connecting readily to black hole thermodynamics.


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