Abstracts

Peter Byrne
Everett Speaks

 In "Everett Speaks" I will detail Everett's involvement in operations research during the Cold War. He was, for many years, a major architect of the United States' nuclear war plan. I will talk about his family life and his personal decline. We will hear a portion of the only tape recording of Everett in existence, in which Everett and Charles Misner talk about the origin of the Many World's interpretation--twenty years later at a cocktail party.  

Christopher A. Fuchs
13 Quotes from Everettian Papers and Why They Unsettle Me

101 years ago William James wrote this about the Hegelian movement in philosophy:  "The absolute mind which they offer us, the mind that makes our universe by thinking it, might, for aught they show us to the contrary, have made any one of a million other universes just as well as this.  You can deduce no single actual particular from the notion of it.  It is compatible with any state of things whatever being true here below."  With some minor changes of phrase---for instance "mathematical structure" in place of "absolute mind"---one might well imagine morphing this into a remark about Everettian quantum mechanics.  This point, coupled with the observation that the Everett interpretation has been declared complete and consistent for the selfsame number of years that its supporters have been trying to complete it, indicate to me that perhaps the Everett approach is more a quantum-independent mindset than a scientific necessity.  So be it, but then it should be recognized as such.  In this talk, I will try to expand on these suspicions. 

James Hartle
Quasiclassical Realms and Copenhagen Quantum Theory in a Quantum Universe

One of the most remarkable features of our quantum universe is the wide range of time, place, scale, and epoch on which the deterministic laws of classical physics apply to an excellent approximation. This talk reviews the origin of such a quasiclassical realm in a universe governed fundamentally by quantum mechanical laws  characterized by indeterminacy and distributed probabilities. We stress the important roles in this origin played by classical spacetime, coarse-graining in terms of approximately conserved quantities, local equilibrium, and the initial quantum state of the universe. The discussion is carried out first in the decoherent (or consistent) histories formulation of the quantum mechanics of closed systems (most generally the universe) assuming spacetime geometry is fixed.  This is an Everettian generalization of the usual Copenhagen text book quantum mechanics of measurement situations that assumes the quasiclassical realm. Conversely we isolate the assumptions and approximations necessary to derive Copenhagen quantum mechanics from the more general quantum mechanics of closed systems. We describe a further generalization of usual quantum theory that is necessary to deal with quantum spacetime and describe under what conditions it predicts our observed coarse-grained classical spacetime that is a prerequisite for a quasiclassical realm. 

Huw Price
Decisions, Decisions, Decisions: Thoughts about actions in an Everett World

 

The most common objection to the Everett view of QM is that it 'cannot make sense of probability'.   The 'Oxford project' of writers such as Deutsch, Wallace, Saunders and Greaves seeks to meet this objection by showing that the Everett view allows some suitable analogue of decision under uncertainty, and that probability (or some suitable analogue of probability) can be understood on that basis. As a pragmatist, I'm very sympathetic to the idea that probability in general needs to be understood in terms of its links with decision; but I'm sceptical about whether the Everett picture provides a suitable analogue of decision under uncertainty. In this talk I'll try to justify my scepticism. 


Wayne Myrvold
The Everettian Evidential Problem


Much of the evidence for quantum mechanics is statistical in nature.  Close agreement between Born-rule probabilities and observed relative frequencies of results in a series of repeated experiments is taken as evidence that quantum mechanics is getting something --- namely, the probabilities of outcomes of experiments --- at least approximately right.  On the Everettian interpretation, however, each possible outcome occurs on some branch of the multiverse, and there is no obvious way to make sense of ascribing probabilities to outcomes of experiments.  Thus, the Everett interpretation threatens to undermine much of the evidence we have for quantum mechanics.  In this paper, I will argue that the Everettian evidential problem is indeed one that Everettians should take seriously, and explain why, in order to deal with it successfully, it is necessary to go beyond existing approaches, including the Deutsch-Wallace decision-theoretic approach.


David Wallace

Probability in the Everett interpretation: state of play

I will review the current state of the probability problem. My main focus will be on the attempts by David Deutsch and myself to provide a proof of the Born Rule starting from Everettian assumptions, but I will also attempt to locate these attempts within the more general framework of the probability problem.


Wojciech Zurek
Relative States and the Environment

 

Everett explained “collapse of the wavepacket” by noting that observer will perceive the  state of the measured quantum system relative to the state of his own records.  Two elements (missing in this simple and compelling explanation of effective collapse) are required to complete relative state interpretation: (i) A preferred basis for states of at least some systems in the wholly quantum Universe must be identified, so that apparatus pointers and other recording devices can persist over time. This implies breaking of the unitary symmetry in the original (more egalitarian) relative state interpretation, so that it can successfully

account for classicality of macroscopic objects in accord with Bohr’s view of the role of measuring

apparatus, and with our everyday experience. It is now widely accepted that decoherence (caused by

the monitoring of systems by their environments) leads to einselection of pointer states, accounting

for the emergence of preferred states. However, tools used by decoherence rely on the second missing

link between quantum substrate and reality; (ii) A prescription that connects probabilities of outcomes with amplitudes of quantum states – such as Born’s rule is still needed. Born’s rule could be in principle postulated, but as Everett noted fifty years ago this should not be necessary. I show that both (i) einselection and (ii) Born’s rule follow from symmetries of entangled quantum states. Entanglement represents information transfer between the to-be-classical quantum systems and their environments. Information transfer in course of decoherence produces multiple copies of the state of the system: its redundant imprints in the environment. This multiplicity of records can account for the objective existence of preferred pointer states: (iii) Quantum Darwinism singles out  the “fittest observable” of the system (the observable that produces the most information-theoretic “offspring” of its state, i.e. the most copies in the environment). These fittest observables exist objectively: information about them can be found out indirectly, from the environment, without perturbing the underlying state of the system.  The objective existence of pointer states is the foundation of the existential interpretation. The existential interpretation recognizes with Everett  the relative nature of quantum states, but accounts for the effectively classical states (which unlike quantum states of isolated systems – can be found out without getting disrupted in the process) through quantum Darwinism.


Max Tegmark 
Which many world worries are uniquely quantum?

I analyze a series of common objections to Everett's Many Worlds Interpretation. I discuss which ones are unique to quantum mechanics, and which have nothing to do with quantum mechanics per se as they can also be debated in the context of other areas of physics.


Ruediger Schack
Subjective Probability and Many Worlds

Probability is often regarded as a problem for the many-worlds interpretation: if all branches of the splitting wavefunction are equally real, what sense does it make to say that the branches have different probabilities? In the decision-theoretic approach due to Deutsch and Wallace, probabilities acquire a meaning through the preferences of a rational agent.  This talk reviews the decision-theoretic approach to probability in classical physics and quantum mechanics and shows that its application to the many-world interpretation creates a new difficulty for the latter.


Simon Saunders
'The Everett interpretation 

I shall present an overview of quantum mechanics in the Everett interpretation, that emphasises its structural characteristics, as a theory of what exists. In this respect it shares common ground with other fundamental theories in physics. As such its appeal is conservative; it makes do with the purely unitary equations of quantum mechanics as exceptionless and universal. It also makes do with standard methods for extracting 'high level' or 'emergent' ontology, the furniture of macroscopic worlds, from largish molecules on up. It would appeal all the more if it made do with standard epistemological principles too - for example, in the context of inductive statistical confirmation, with standard Bayesian epistemology. But this links to the question of the interpretation of probability in the Everett interpretation, and here the theory seems anything but conservative. It is a common complaint that the approach leaves no room at all for talk of uncertainty. I shall argue, again on conservative interpretative practises, that this claim is incorrect. Chance events are, indeed, revealed in a surprising light - as quantum branchings - but they are the more perspicuous, and their properties and quantitative measure better explained, in light of that.


Adrian Kent
Everett and Evolution

A fundamental question for Everettians is whether they can formulate a many-worlds interpretation of quantum theory which explains why, amongst all possible types of intelligent creature with all possible types of evolutionary and experimental history, we find ourselves among those whose histories apparently confirm Copenhagen quantum mechanics.   Since the theory clearly allows that we could have found ourselves otherwise, the answer has to be probabilistic.  Everettians then need to supply some account of how probability is or can be attached to an apparently deterministic theory.    I argue that it cannot arise through any of the various notions of subjective uncertainty advocated by Saunders, Wallace, Vaidman and Greaves, among others, since none of these notions are valid.   Nor could an adequate notion of probability be inferred from any account of the “caring weights” that we, as hypothetical rational Everettian agents, should use when considering the welfare of our Everettian successors – even if a unique rational strategy were to exist, which I argue is not the case.    A proposition of the desired form could simply be postulated, but at the price of reducing the entire interpretation – probability postulate, preferred basis, and interpretation of basis states --to unsupported and maybe untestable hypotheses about consciousness.  

On the brighter side, I describe a new proposal for solving the measurement problem by proposing a definite mathematical structure for possible branching worlds, which appears to have the advantages claimed for Everettian ideas (in particular, respect of Lorentz invariance and of conservation laws), without the interpretational and scientific difficulties. I also note one subtle distinction between Everettian and standard accounts of evolution, which implies that (in principle, albeit not necessarily in practice) it could be possible to distinguish between the theories. 


David Albert
Probability in the Everett Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics

I will rehearse and try to sharpen some of the perennial worries about making sense of probabilities in Everettian interpretations of quantum mechanics, with particular attention to the recent Decision-Theoretic proposals of Deutsch and others.


David Papineau
Probabilities and Choices in Many Worlds

 

 

Orthodox thinking about chance, choice and confirmation is a philosophical mess.  Within the many-worlds metaphysics, where quantum chanciness engenders no uncertainty, these things come out at least as well, if not better.


Hilary Greaves 
Solution(?) to the Everettian Evidential Problem

This talk follows on from Wayne Myrvold's (and is based on joint work with Myrvold). I aim (and claim) to provide a unified account of theory confirmation that can deal with the (actual) situation in which we are uncertain whether the true theory is a probabilistic one or a branching-universe one, that does not presuppose the correctness of any particular physical theory, and that illuminates the connection between the decision-theoretic and the confirmation-theoretic roles of probabilities and their Everettian analogs. (The technique is to piggy-back on the existing body of physics-independent decision theory due to Savage, De Finetti and others, and to exploit the pervasive structural analogy between probabilistic theories and branching-universe theories in arguing for a particular application of that same mathematics to the branching case.) One corollary of this account is that ordinary empirical evidence (such as observed outcomes of relative-frequency trials) confirms Everettian QM in precisely the same way that it confirms a probabilistic QM; I claim that this result solves the Evidential Problem discussed by Myrvold. I will also briefly discuss the relationship between this approach and the Everettian "derivation of the Born rule" due to Deutsch and Wallace.

 

 

 
 
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