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by bmh100
3360 days ago
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You could, and that's a fair point, but you're more talking about philosophy of science and epistemology. My point is that Many Worlds seems to die to Occam's Razor, because of all the additional requirements to accept Many Worlds over something like wave function collapse. |
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Given direct experience of one universe, I think it's more ontologically conservative to introduce multiple universes than it is to introduce a whole new unprecedented category of cats that are simultaneously dead and alive.
Very loose analogy: if I see a mouse in front of me and simultaneously hear a squeak behind me, I'd probably assume two mice rather than one mouse which has learned ventriloquism.