Maybe we're at cross purposes with what branch counting means.
I always invisaged in branch counting, performing measurements as like
dividing up the unit interval [0,1) into subsets. So if you first
divide the interval into 2 subsets, you'd get [0,0.5) and
[0.5,1). Then at the second step, you'd subdivide [0.5,1) into
[0.5,0.75) and [0.75,1). The measures of the three resultant steps are
0.5, 0.25, 0.25 using the most naive way of measuring real intervals.
The counting comes from attempting to count the number of subsets of
the real interval. Of course, these are uncountable sets, but if you
restrict yourself always to finite partitions - say all rational
numbers with fewer than n decimal places - and perform counting of the
numbers in the subsets - and then take the limit as n goes to
infinity, the naive measure is what you get in the limit.
The analogy doesn't quite work, because in QM one has complex
measures, not real ones as per the example.
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Dr Russell Standish Phone 0425 253119 (mobile)
Principal, High Performance Coders
hpc...@hpcoders.com.au
http://www.hpcoders.com.au
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