This has never made much sense to me, because I would think that all the possible branches of the multiverse would still have to obey the laws of physics. For example, I would not expect there to be a universe where a spacecraft accelerates to the speed of light, because the probability of it happening is 0. Likewise, I would expect the laws of physics to put a limit on how long a human body can last. Is there really a universe where a 20,000 year old caveman is still alive? How would a consciousness survive the death of the universe (big rip, big crunch, ect).It assumes that your consciousness, once formed, would always have a non-zero probability of continuing to exist in an every decreasing fraction of an infinite number of universes. You only experience the universe in which your consciousness continues. However, not every accident kills or doesn't kill you -- many simply leave you maimed, and you still have a non-zero probability of your consciousness surviving to infinity in that state.[...]
Your and FordSVT's objections are my objections also. What is termed "quantum mysticism" is not part of traditional physics education. Most physicists would look at such speculation with embarassment. They only use QM to do their calculations (aka "shut up and calculate"). I find reading about this stuff amusing, and I don't have to worry about career damage from admitting this. My opinion (for what little that's worth) is that such outlandish ideas as quantum immortality arise because something is either missing from our knowledge or lacking in our interpretation.Just some musings from someone with almost no formal physics education.![]()
This has never made much sense to me, because I would think that all the possible branches of the multiverse would still have to obey the laws of physics. For example, I would not expect there to be a universe where a spacecraft accelerates to the speed of light, because the probability of it happening is 0.
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