I guess I’ve always been confused by the Many Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Physics and the fact that it’s taken seriously. Like is there any proof at all that universes outside of our own exist?

I admit that I might be dumb, but, how does one look at atoms and say “My God! There must be many worlds than just our one?”

I just never understood how Many Worlds Interpretation was valid, with my, admittedly limited understanding, it just seemed to be a wild guess no more strange than a lot things we consider too outlandish to humor.

  • voracitude@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    Right, and you can find out what it looks like beyond the event horizon of a black hole by just throwing a probe in that can survive the approach. Mind you, you’re not getting any information back out of the black hole, but it’ll be there in the probe’s databanks regardless. I suppose you can have it back over the span of the rest of the black hole’s life; though, you’ll need to record everything else coming out of it and somehow cohere all that information back together in the right order.

    Which is only about as difficult to get anything scientifically useful from as your probabilistic proof machine. Both involve lots of radiation though, so they’re basically the same thing! (👉゚ヮ゚)👉