One is a cult. AG
On Fri, Dec 27, 2024 at 02:05:49PM -0800, Alan Grayson wrote:
>
>
> On Thursday, December 26, 2024 at 11:39:48 PM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:
>
> One is a cult. AG
>
>
> And we know it's a cult because particular powerful criticisms are totally
> ignored, presumably to defend the faith. I notice that common house flies, like
> ants, move in constant zig-zag paths. Is it not ridiculous to expect new ENTIRE
> universes are created with each zig and each zag? And what happens when
> motorists reach a T-intersection? AG
I hate to break it to you, but what is ridiculous to you is not necessarily ridiculous to someone else.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_to_ridicule
On Fri, Dec 27, 2024 at 06:14:52PM -0800, Alan Grayson wrote:
>
> From your pov, does the MWI imply new universes are created at every zig or zag
> of an ant or a common house fly, or a motorist at a T -intersection? Yes or No?
> AG
>
Yes. Or differentiates. Its the same thing, actually. To those who see
a distinction, take your pick.
On Fri, Dec 27, 2024 at 10:56:06PM -0800, Alan Grayson wrote:
>
>
> On Friday, December 27, 2024 at 11:07:34 PM UTC-7 Russell Standish wrote:
>
> On Fri, Dec 27, 2024 at 06:14:52PM -0800, Alan Grayson wrote:
> >
> > From your pov, does the MWI imply new universes are created at every zig
> or zag
> > of an ant or a common house fly, or a motorist at a T -intersection? Yes
> or No?
> > AG
> >
>
> Yes. Or differentiates. Its the same thing, actually. To those who see
> a distinction, take your pick.
>
>
> But since you have no clue what an entire universe actually IS, don't you think
> you're
> speculating way beyond your pay grade? AG
No.
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>> All you have are smoke and mirrors. On second thought, maybe just smoke. AG> Says the guy who found a fatal flow in SR and cannot comprehend simultaneity in spacelike separated scenario... the joke is very good.
f
Truly, it resides in the more-or-less unstated assumption, that there exists an OBJECTIVE reality which precludes this result; that the car fits in the garage frame, but doesn't fit in the car frame.
On 12/28/2024 3:45 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
Do you know how the SR problem is stated, I mean really know? It's like this; you have a car and a garage, with the car longer than the garage. Can you use SR to make the car fit in the garage? Well, of course. All that's required is to speed the car to a velocity which, from the frame of the car, contracts the garage sufficiently to get it to fit.
That's not even a correct statement of the paradox. You make the car fit the the garage in the garage frame by speeding the car up so the car is Lorentz contracted (I really liked the original tank trap version better).
Problem solved, or so it appears. The various self appointed experts and gurus have an allegedly better solution, but ostensibly somewhat more complicated. Instead of considering length contraction of the garage, they apply the disagreement about simultaneity to show the car won't fit from the pov of the car frame, but does fit from the pov of the garage frame. So, as you should be able to comprehend, both methods give the SAME result! So where is the paradox?
Truly, it resides in the more-or-less unstated assumption, that there exists an OBJECTIVE reality which precludes this result; that the car fits in the garage frame, but doesn't fit in the car frame.It's not only unstated, it's un-assumed and non-existent. It's no one's version of the paradox...much less "objective reality". Rather it is Grayson's imagined reality.
Brent
On Saturday, December 28, 2024 at 4:05:26 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 12/28/2024 3:45 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
Do you know how the SR problem is stated, I mean really know? It's like this; you have a car and a garage, with the car longer than the garage. Can you use SR to make the car fit in the garage? Well, of course. All that's required is to speed the car to a velocity which, from the frame of the car, contracts the garage sufficiently to get it to fit.
That's not even a correct statement of the paradox. You make the car fit the the garage in the garage frame by speeding the car up so the car is Lorentz contracted (I really liked the original tank trap version better).
Problem solved, or so it appears. The various self appointed experts and gurus have an allegedly better solution, but ostensibly somewhat more complicated. Instead of considering length contraction of the garage, they apply the disagreement about simultaneity to show the car won't fit from the pov of the car frame, but does fit from the pov of the garage frame. So, as you should be able to comprehend, both methods give the SAME result! So where is the paradox?
Truly, it resides in the more-or-less unstated assumption, that there exists an OBJECTIVE reality which precludes this result; that the car fits in the garage frame, but doesn't fit in the car frame.It's not only unstated, it's un-assumed and non-existent. It's no one's version of the paradox...much less "objective reality". Rather it is Grayson's imagined reality.
Brent
How about revealing YOUR version of the paradox? Cat got your tongue? AG
On 12/28/2024 3:45 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
Do you know how the SR problem is stated, I mean really know? It's like this; you have a car and a garage, with the car longer than the garage. Can you use SR to make the car fit in the garage? Well, of course. All that's required is to speed the car to a velocity which, from the frame of the car, contracts the garage sufficiently to get it to fit.
That's not even a correct statement of the paradox. You make the car fit the the garage in the garage frame by speeding the car up so the car is Lorentz contracted (I really liked the original tank trap version better).
Problem solved, or so it appears. The various self appointed experts and gurus have an allegedly better solution, but ostensibly somewhat more complicated. Instead of considering length contraction of the garage, they apply the disagreement about simultaneity to show the car won't fit from the pov of the car frame, but does fit from the pov of the garage frame. So, as you should be able to comprehend, both methods give the SAME result! So where is the paradox?
Truly, it resides in the more-or-less unstated assumption, that there exists an OBJECTIVE reality which precludes this result; that the car fits in the garage frame, but doesn't fit in the car frame.It's not only unstated, it's un-assumed and non-existent. It's no one's version of the paradox...much less "objective reality". Rather it is Grayson's imagined reality.
Brent
On Saturday, December 28, 2024 at 4:05:26 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:On 12/28/2024 3:45 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
Do you know how the SR problem is stated, I mean really know? It's like this; you have a car and a garage, with the car longer than the garage. Can you use SR to make the car fit in the garage? Well, of course. All that's required is to speed the car to a velocity which, from the frame of the car, contracts the garage sufficiently to get it to fit.
That's not even a correct statement of the paradox. You make the car fit the the garage in the garage frame by speeding the car up so the car is Lorentz contracted (I really liked the original tank trap version better). Brent
On Sunday, December 29, 2024 at 3:03:22 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:On Saturday, December 28, 2024 at 4:05:26 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:On 12/28/2024 3:45 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
Do you know how the SR problem is stated, I mean really know? It's like this; you have a car and a garage, with the car longer than the garage. Can you use SR to make the car fit in the garage? Well, of course. All that's required is to speed the car to a velocity which, from the frame of the car, contracts the garage sufficiently to get it to fit.
That's not even a correct statement of the paradox. You make the car fit the the garage in the garage frame by speeding the car up so the car is Lorentz contracted (I really liked the original tank trap version better). BrentI just noticed your comment. Sure, I didn't use the words "Lorentz contracted", but does anyone doubt this is what I meant? Is it really worth trying to crucify me for a minor oversight in language? I guess the answer for you is affirmative. AG
> The trouble is that the alternative of a single objective reality that you argue for is not a falsifiable scientific theory either. The real problem is that Occams razor actually prefers the everything theory over a single objective reality.
> I have no inherent objection to the existence of many worlds. It's plausible in the context of continuous inflation, but surely not in the context of the MW
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All that's required is to speed the car to a velocity which, from the frame of the car, contracts the garage sufficiently to get it to fit.
That's not even a correct statement of the paradox. You make the car fit the the garage in the garage frame by speeding the car up so the car is Lorentz contracted (I really liked the original tank trap version better). BrentI just noticed your comment. Sure, I didn't use the words "Lorentz contracted", but does anyone doubt this is what I meant? Is it really worth trying to crucify me for a minor oversight in language? I guess the answer for you is affirmative. AG
Le dim. 29 déc. 2024, 21:08, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Saturday, December 28, 2024 at 6:24:51 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 12/28/2024 5:00 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Saturday, December 28, 2024 at 4:05:26 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 12/28/2024 3:45 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
Do you know how the SR problem is stated, I mean really know? It's like this; you have a car and a garage, with the car longer than the garage. Can you use SR to make the car fit in the garage? Well, of course. All that's required is to speed the car to a velocity which, from the frame of the car, contracts the garage sufficiently to get it to fit.
That's not even a correct statement of the paradox. You make the car fit the the garage in the garage frame by speeding the car up so the car is Lorentz contracted (I really liked the original tank trap version better).
Problem solved, or so it appears. The various self appointed experts and gurus have an allegedly better solution, but ostensibly somewhat more complicated. Instead of considering length contraction of the garage, they apply the disagreement about simultaneity to show the car won't fit from the pov of the car frame, but does fit from the pov of the garage frame. So, as you should be able to comprehend, both methods give the SAME result! So where is the paradox?
Truly, it resides in the more-or-less unstated assumption, that there exists an OBJECTIVE reality which precludes this result; that the car fits in the garage frame, but doesn't fit in the car frame.It's not only unstated, it's un-assumed and non-existent. It's no one's version of the paradox...much less "objective reality". Rather it is Grayson's imagined reality.
Brent
How about revealing YOUR version of the paradox? Cat got your tongue? AG
I've both explained it and diagrammed it. As Oliver Heaviside said, "I've given you an argument. I'm not obliged to give you an understanding."
BrentWhen I asked whether there's an objective reality, you denied it -- and in one of your responses here you again denied it -- but it exists and consists of the car fitting in both frames. Maybe you're suffering from Alzheimer's onset. My intuition was correct, or possibly you don't understand English as well as you think. Why would you expect me to study your plots if you showed lack of understanding what a solution would imply? AGHow can you feel no shame being so stupid?
Here's another video which shows the paradox is resolved by demonstrating that the car fits in both frames, again affirming my intuition that 1), the paradox is caused by the apparent disagreement between the frames that the car fits in garage; and 2), the fact that using the LT properly, by including time dilation, there does exist an objective reality wherein the car fits in garage in both frames. Why then, when I asked you to affirm the existence of this objective reality, you denied it? AG


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On 12/29/2024 4:08 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
Here's another video which shows the paradox is resolved by demonstrating that the car fits in both frames, again affirming my intuition that 1), the paradox is caused by the apparent disagreement between the frames that the car fits in garage; and 2), the fact that using the LT properly, by including time dilation, there does exist an objective reality wherein the car fits in garage in both frames. Why then, when I asked you to affirm the existence of this objective reality, you denied it? AG
You don't even understand the things you post...or you're just trolling.
Brent
In other alleged SR paradoxes, where observers are juxtaposed like the TP, the resolution involves some asymmetry, but not in this case. My question was, really, as far as you know, is there any way for the car to fit in the garage from the car's frame? For you, I suppose that the observers differing in their conclusion about fitting is not a problem. If so, my use of length contraction should have been sufficient for you, since the conclusion is the same as your plots. For me the disagreement is a problem, but it's hard to come up with a convincing argument why that's the case. On the Internet, it seems to be assumed that such disagreement produces what appears to be a paradox, but it's not argued why this is so. In my discussions with Jesse I tried to imagine a Bird's Eye Observer for an observer, say, from a satellite with the garage being open on the top, to determine what would be observed, by an alleged objective observer, but I'm not sure this is helpful in this case. AG

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I've answered *multiple* times, it all boils down to a disagreement about simultaneity,
>I don't find the Occam's razor argument very persuasive. First, having an infinity of universes does seem very simple.
> And if you favor the MWI why not take it all the way like our friend Bruno and say that everything computable happens.
> And when exactly does the world split?
> Is it within the forward light cone?
> And where exactly is the point of that cone?
> What happens there that produces the Born rule?
> Personally I tend to take a more instrumentalist view of QM.
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Chatgpt is your friend and accept an infinite amount of trolling, here is its a correct answer:The scenario you're referring to is a classic thought experiment in special relativity called the "ladder paradox" or "pole-and-barn paradox". It illustrates how the effects of Lorentz contraction and the relativity of simultaneity work together to resolve what seems like a paradox.The Setup:Imagine a car moving at a relativistic speed (close to the speed of light) towards a garage. The car is longer than the garage when measured in their respective rest frames. The question is: can the car fit entirely inside the garage for a moment, given Lorentz contraction?Lorentz Contraction:1. In the garage's frame of reference (rest frame of the garage):Due to the Lorentz contraction, the moving car appears shorter than its rest length. This contraction occurs along the direction of motion.From the garage's perspective, it seems that the car becomes short enough to fit entirely inside the garage for a moment.2. In the car's frame of reference (rest frame of the car):The car perceives the garage as moving toward it at relativistic speed. Due to Lorentz contraction, the garage appears even shorter than its rest length.From the car's perspective, it seems impossible for the car to fit inside the garage, as the garage is too short.Relativity of Simultaneity:The apparent paradox arises because different observers disagree on what events are simultaneous. Here's how this resolves the situation:1. In the garage's frame:The garage can be equipped with two doors: a front door and a back door.At one specific instant (according to the garage's clock), both doors can close simultaneously, with the car fully inside the garage.2. In the car's frame:Simultaneity is relative. The car's frame does not agree that the front and back doors close at the same time.
Instead, it perceives the back door closing first and the front door closing later (or vice versa, depending on the direction of motion).
Resolving the Paradox:1. In the garage's frame, the car can fit entirely inside the garage due to Lorentz contraction.2. In the car's frame, the car never fits entirely inside the garage.
However, because simultaneity is relative, the sequence of door closures ensures that no collision occurs, and the situation is physically consistent in both frames.
On Sun, Dec 29, 2024 at 9:24 PM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:
>I don't find the Occam's razor argument very persuasive. First, having an infinity of universes does seem very simple.The number of universes is irrelevant because Occam's razor is about picking the theory that needs the fewest assumptions to explain observations, it is NOT about picking the theory that produces the simplest consequences;
and all those many worlds are the result of the one and only assumption that Many Worlds makes, everything always obeys Schrodinger's Equation.
Many World's rivals say everything always obeys Schrodinger's equation EXCEPT when they don't, like when you observe them. Then they obey entirely different laws of physics. To make matters even worse they are very unclear about what "observe" means and what qualities a thing needs in order to be granted the honorific title "you".
> And if you favor the MWI why not take it all the way like our friend Bruno and say that everything computable happens.
Because Bruno had nothing equivalent to the two slit experiment, and because Occam's razor says a theory should always make the smallest assumptions, and "everything computable happens" includes "everything obeys Schrodinger's equation" BUT it also contains an infinite amount of other stuff that is unnecessary to explain observations.
> And when exactly does the world split?
Whenever the laws of physics as described by Quantum Mechanics says there is a possibility of a change.
> Is it within the forward light cone?It is within A forward light cone but if Many Worlds is correct then there is no such thing as THE forward light cone, except perhaps the one produced at the first Planck Time after the Big Bang. But nobody has a good understanding about what was going on that early in the universe.
> And where exactly is the point of that cone?The place and the time that the change had occurred.
After that the change radiated outward at either the speed of light or instantaneously, take your pick it makes no observable difference.
> What happens there that produces the Born rule?
What happens is the only thing that could happen if Schrodinger's Equation is going to produce a set of positive real numbers between 0 and 1 that always add up to exactly one.
> Personally I tend to take a more instrumentalist view of QM.
OK. There's nothing wrong with the "Shut Up And Calculate" quantum interpretation if you're only interested in predicting what value you're going to get on your voltmeter and don't care about what's actually going on.
bid
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my point was that the your assertion about Occam's razor is just that. There is no proof, nor can there be that this measure of "simplicity" is what Occam really meant, or is the real and true simplicity. It is just the revisionist thinking since Occam's time that has leaned to the "fewest assumptions" idea. His actual "razor" was, "Entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity." Not "assumptions" but "entities".
>>all those many worlds are the result of the one and only assumption that Many Worlds makes, everything always obeys Schrodinger's Equation.
> And it makes the assumption that somehow when we figure it out and we're really, really, that we will (probably) explain how our world splits off and the Born rule obtains without anymore assumptions.
And note that the Schrodinger equation is also unclear except it isolated laboratory experiments
> It is unclear whether an air molecule bouncing this way instead of that splits the world or not.
>>Bruno had nothing equivalent to the two slit experiment, and because Occam's razor says a theory should always make the smallest assumptions, and "everything computable happens" includes "everything obeys Schrodinger's equation" BUT it also contains an infinite amount of other stuff that is unnecessary to explain observations.
You mean like an infinite number of universe and not just alpha-nought number but a continuum infinity of worlds.
The place and the time that the change had occurred.What change? A change that's "observable"?
>>> What happens there that produces the Born rule?
>> What happens is the only thing that could happen if Schrodinger's Equation is going to produce a set of positive real numbers between 0 and 1 that always add up to exactly one.
> That doesn't necessarily produce the Born rule.
On Mon, Dec 30, 2024 at 4:51 PM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:my point was that the your assertion about Occam's razor is just that. There is no proof, nor can there be that this measure of "simplicity" is what Occam really meant, or is the real and true simplicity. It is just the revisionist thinking since Occam's time that has leaned to the "fewest assumptions" idea. His actual "razor" was, "Entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity." Not "assumptions" but "entities".
I am quite certain "entities" is NOT the word William of Ockham used because he was born in the 13th century and spoke Middle English (which sounds more like German than English to a speaker of modern English) and wrote exclusively in Latin. And whatever Latin word he used instead of "entities|" it must've meant a thing that has not been proved, a.k.a. an assumption,
I mean, what else could he have meant? Why in the world would he object to taking things that HAVE been proven into account when forming a theory?
This is what Wikipedia has to say about Ockham;s Razor:
"The Razor advocates that when presented with competing hypotheses about the same prediction and both hypotheses have equal explanatory power, one should prefer the hypothesis that requires the fewest assumptions"
>>all those many worlds are the result of the one and only assumption that Many Worlds makes, everything always obeys Schrodinger's Equation.
> And it makes the assumption that somehow when we figure it out and we're really, really, that we will (probably) explain how our world splits off and the Born rule obtains without anymore assumptions.
Sorry but I can't quite parse that sentence. Add "sure" after "really, really".
And note that the Schrodinger equation is also unclear except it isolated laboratory experiments
Exactly the same the could be said about the law of conservation of matter, when I light a piece of paper on fire it sure seems like matter is destroyed, and we only realized it when we lit a piece of paper in isolated isolated laboratory experiments/
> It is unclear whether an air molecule bouncing this way instead of that splits the world or not.
Maybe Worlds is wrong but it is not unclear, if the laws of physics allow for an air molecule to bounce two different ways and Many Worlds is right then the world splits. If it's wrong then it doesn't.
I thought the big advantage of MWI in your view is that it told you what really happens. So when the molecules can bounce two different ways, what Schroedinger's equation predicts a is a superposition. Not a mixture. In other words they bounce both different ways.
>>Bruno had nothing equivalent to the two slit experiment, and because Occam's razor says a theory should always make the smallest assumptions, and "everything computable happens" includes "everything obeys Schrodinger's equation" BUT it also contains an infinite amount of other stuff that is unnecessary to explain observations.You mean like an infinite number of universe and not just alpha-nought number but a continuum infinity of worlds.
According to Many Wolds there might be an infinite number of worlds or there might only be an astronomical Number to an astronomical power of them, it takes no position in the finite versus infinite debate. And as I keep telling you, Hugh Everett didn't just conjure up all those worlds because he thought they were neat about me good science fiction stories, he did it because it's an inevitable consequence of believing that Schrodinger's equation means what it says.
The place and the time that the change had occurred.What change? A change that's "observable"?
No. But you already knew that.
>>> What happens there that produces the Born rule?>> What happens is the only thing that could happen if Schrodinger's Equation is going to produce a set of positive real numbers between 0 and 1 that always add up to exactly one.
> That doesn't necessarily produce the Born rule.
Yes it does! .According to Gleason's theorem the Born Rule DOES produce a set of numbers that1) are all real numbers between zero and one2) all the numbers add up to exactly one.3) and the numbers multiply exactly the same way that the laws of probability multiply.And Gleason's theorem says one other thing, the Born Rule is the ONLY way to do it.
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>> I am quite certain "entities" is NOT the word William of Ockham used because he was born in the 13th century and spoke Middle English (which sounds more like German than English to a speaker of modern English) and wrote exclusively in Latin. And whatever Latin word he used instead of "entities" it must've meant a thing that has not been proved, a.k.a. an assumption,> pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate, “plurality should not be posited without necessity.”
> He doesn't say plurality of what.
> He makes no reference to proof.
>>> That it refers to assumptions is a modern interpretation.
>> I mean, what else could he have meant? Why in the world would he object to taking things that HAVE been proven into account when forming a theory?
> You have gratuitously assumed it had to do with proof.
>> This is what Wikipedia has to say about Ockham's Razor:
"The Razor advocates that when presented with competing hypotheses about the same prediction and both hypotheses have equal explanatory power, one should prefer the hypothesis that requires the fewest assumptions"
> And Wikipedia just records current thoughts on Occam's razor.
>> Maybe Worlds is wrong but it is not unclear, if the laws of physics allow for an air molecule to bounce two different ways and Many Worlds is right then the world splits. If it's wrong then it doesn't.
> I thought the big advantage of MWI in your view is that it told you what really happens.
> So when the molecules can bounce two different ways, what Schroedinger's equation predicts a is a superposition. Not a mixture.
>> According to Many Wolds there might be an infinite number of worlds or there might only be an astronomical Number to an astronomical power of them, it takes no position in the finite versus infinite debate. And as I keep telling you, Hugh Everett didn't just conjure up all those worlds because he thought they were neat and made good science fiction stories, he did it because it's an inevitable consequence of believing that Schrodinger's equation means what it says.
> Hugh Everett didn't conjure them up at all. His was the "relative state" interpretation. Bryce Dewitt is mainly responsible for the many worlds idea.
> Schoedinger's equation produces a lot of complex values until you make a measurement (which is NOT described by the Schroedinger eqn).
>> I am quite certain "entities" is NOT the word William of Ockham used because he was born in the 13th century and spoke Middle English (which sounds more like German than English to a speaker of modern English) and wrote exclusively in Latin. And whatever Latin word he used instead of "entities" it must've meant a thing that has not been proved, a.k.a. an assumption,> pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate, “plurality should not be posited without necessity.”The dictionary on my Mac says the definition of the word "posited" is "assumed as a fact". Assumed!> He doesn't say plurality of what.Yes, and I am quite certain that was because he thought the answer was obvious.
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Look at the sky, look at the size of the visible universe and all the entities we can see... I don't see *many worlds* as more extravagant, there is already for sure a bazillion entities.
On Wednesday, January 1, 2025 at 2:59:15 PM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Look at the sky, look at the size of the visible universe and all the entities we can see... I don't see *many worlds* as more extravagant, there is already for sure a bazillion entities.It is more extravagant, hugely more extravagant. For example, it adds the postulate that everything that can happen, anything that's possible to happen, must happen. So, for example, when considering a horse race, every possible outcome of the race must exist, and for this to be realized, additional worlds must come into existence. It's claimed that this extravagant added postulate comes from Schrodinger's equation, but in fact it's nowhere in sight. Look for yourself if you don't believe me. Or consider what happens when a motorist turns at a T-intersection; not simply two worlds for each possible direction, but a myriad of worlds, perhaps uncountable, corresponding to all possible angles of turning. Moreover, in virtually all versions of the interpretation, the worlds are disjoint and therefore never interact. So the theory is non-testable. IMO, what we have here is a cult, and as such, when confronted with the added postulate and its justification, conjured from thin air as it were, there's never a response to its origin, since it surely does not originate from S's equation. IMO, FWIW, the MWI is pure fantasy, and a harmful one which has corrupted the mentality of the physics community. AG
On Wednesday, January 1, 2025 at 2:59:15 PM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
> Quinton: Look at the sky, look at the size of the visible universe and all the entities we can see... I don't see *many worlds* as more extravagant, there is already for sure a bazillion entities.
> Alan: It is more extravagant, hugely more extravagant.
> IMO, what we have here is a cult,
ald
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On 12/29/2024 2:03 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
They are just calculating the position of the ends of the car in the garage frame so it it is contracted.
Brent
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The troll playing the victim... when will it cease ?
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There's nothing "absolute" about the CMB. It's just a widely available common reference. The same way we often use the Earth as a reference. The laws of physics are the same when moving inertially relative to the CMB as relative to the Earth or Moon.
Brent
On Thursday, January 2, 2025 at 8:56:51 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
There's nothing "absolute" about the CMB. It's just a widely available common reference. The same way we often use the Earth as a reference. The laws of physics are the same when moving inertially relative to the CMB as relative to the Earth or Moon.
BrentWhat does "absolute" mean?
It sure seems as absolute as anyone can imagine; the same everywhere in the universe. AG
On 1/2/2025 4:34 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:On Thursday, January 2, 2025 at 3:58:33 PM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:The troll playing the victim... when will it cease ?
Since the CMBR defines a frame of absolute rest, how does this effect Special Relativity, if at all? AG
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On 1/2/2025 9:06 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 2, 2025 at 8:56:51 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
There's nothing "absolute" about the CMB. It's just a widely available common reference. The same way we often use the Earth as a reference. The laws of physics are the same when moving inertially relative to the CMB as relative to the Earth or Moon.
BrentWhat does "absolute" mean?It would mean that the laws of physics were special in some sense, e.g. took a special form, in an absolutely stationary state.
It sure seems as absolute as anyone can imagine; the same everywhere in the universe. AG
No. It's just something that can be used as a reference, as could any other frame in inertial motion. And it's not even a perfect reference since some parts move relative to others.
Brent
On 12/29/2024 2:03 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
They are just calculating the position of the ends of the car in the garage frame so it it is contracted.
Brent
On 1/2/2025 9:06 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 2, 2025 at 8:56:51 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
There's nothing "absolute" about the CMB. It's just a widely available common reference. The same way we often use the Earth as a reference. The laws of physics are the same when moving inertially relative to the CMB as relative to the Earth or Moon.
BrentWhat does "absolute" mean?It would mean that the laws of physics were special in some sense, e.g. took a special form, in an absolutely stationary state.
It sure seems as absolute as anyone can imagine; the same everywhere in the universe. AG
No. It's just something that can be used as a reference, as could any other frame in inertial motion. And it's not even a perfect reference since some parts move relative to others.
Brent
On Thursday, January 2, 2025 at 11:25:00 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 1/2/2025 9:06 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 2, 2025 at 8:56:51 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
There's nothing "absolute" about the CMB. It's just a widely available common reference. The same way we often use the Earth as a reference. The laws of physics are the same when moving inertially relative to the CMB as relative to the Earth or Moon.
BrentWhat does "absolute" mean?It would mean that the laws of physics were special in some sense, e.g. took a special form, in an absolutely stationary state.
It sure seems as absolute as anyone can imagine; the same everywhere in the universe. AG
No. It's just something that can be used as a reference, as could any other frame in inertial motion. And it's not even a perfect reference since some parts move relative to others.
BrentI didn't think it was a problem for SR since it's not the luminiferous ether which was thought to be the only frame in which light speed was a constant. I gave the problem to Quentin as an exercise to take his mind off irrelevancies. AG
> What does "absolute" mean?
> It sure seems as absolute as anyone can imagine; the same everywhere in the universe. AG
On Sun, Dec 29, 2024 at 5:10 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Sunday, December 29, 2024 at 3:01:11 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:On 12/29/2024 2:03 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
They are just calculating the position of the ends of the car in the garage frame so it it is contracted.
Brent
Does it show the car fits from the car frame, which is the claim? Maybe this video is better. AGDo you watch these videos all the way through before posting links? In this one he says at 4:35 that "the solution to our paradox" is that while the doors are able to close simultaneously in the barn's frame with the pole inside, in the pole's frame the door closings are not simultaneous. After actually calculating the times in the pole frame using the LT, he says at 6:45 "Just think about what this means: the time that the back door closes is significantly before the front door closes. In other words, as the barn is moving towards the pole, the back door closes momentarily and then opens up immediately after. And when the back of the pole enters the barn the front door closes. So the closing of the doors that occurred simultaneously in one frame of reference does not occur simultaneously in the other frame of reference, and our paradox is resolved."Jesse