How do you know it all adds up to normality? What should I anticipate if it does, and what should I anticipate if it doesn't? Or is this an a priori principle?
When Einstein overthrew the Newtonian version of gravity, apples didn't stop falling, planets didn't swerve into the Sun. Every new theory of physics must capture the successful predictions of the old theory it displaced; it should predict that the sky will be blue, rather than green.
So don't think that many-worlds is there to make strange, radical, exciting predictions. It all adds up to normality.
Which means that your ethics should not depends on the potential existence of other worlds we have no way of interacting with. In other words, while it mig...
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