As far as I can tell (being a non-physicist), the Transactional Interpretation shares the mathematical simplicity of MWI. And here Kastner and Cramer argue that TI can derive the Born probabilities naturally, whereas MWI is said to need a detour through "the application of social philosophy and decision theory to subjectively defined ‘rational’ observers". So maybe TI is simpler.
The "possibilities" they posit seem quite parallel (pardon the pun) to the multiple worlds or bifurcated observers of MWI, so I don't see the philosophical ad...
I think the short version is that you don't need math that covers the wavefunction collapse, because you don't need the wave function to collapse.
For a longer version, you'd need someone who knows more QM than I do.
In non-relativistic MWI, the evolution of the quantum state is fully described by the Schrodinger equation. In most other interpretations, you need the Schrodinger equation plus some extra element. In Bohmian mechanics the extra element is the guidance equation, in GRW the extra element is a stochastic Gaussian "hit".
In Copenhagen, the extra element is ostensibly the discontinuous wavefunction collapse process upon measurement, but to describe this as complicating the math (rather than the conceptual structure of the theory) is a bit misleading. Whether you're working with Copenhagen or with MWI, you're going to end up using pretty much the same math for making predictions. Although, technically MWI only relies on the Schrodinger equation, if you want to make useful predictions about your branch of the wave function, you're going to have to treat the wave function as if it has collapsed (from a mathematical point of view). So the math isn't simpler than Copenhagen in any practical sense, but it is true that from a purely theoretical point of view, MWI posits a simpler mathematical structure than Copenhagen.
The thing that's always bugged me about the MWI is that it doesn't seem physically sensible. If something isn't physically sensible, than you need to check on your model. This happens all the time in physics - there are so many basic problems where you discard solutions or throw out different terms because they don't make sense. This is the path to successful understanding, rather than stubbornly sticking to your model and insisting that it must be correct.
The impression I get is that, if the math leads you to make a conclusion which seems like physical n...
I usually interpret empirical indistinguishability as "no conceivable distinguishing experiment" rather than "no feasible distinguishing experiment".
Yes, indeed. And it seems like there is a way to potentially falsify MWI, after all (see below). There is no way of falsifying the orthodox approach ("shut up and calculate, unless you can say something instrumentally useful") as yet, because it does not treat collapse as "objective", only as a calculational prescription (this is the part EY completely refuses to acknowledge, and instead goes on constructing and demolishing some objective collapse model). To falsify the orthodox approach one has to show that the Born rule is violated macroscopically, e.g. that you can see something other than a single eigenstate after a measurement, or that the measured probability of it is not the square amplitude.
Now, back to the experimental testing. If I understand it correctly, the quantum cantilever experiment of Bouwmeester, once performed, is likely to show one of two things:
Such a macroscopic object can be put into a superposition of two different spatial states, thus violating the decoherence limit proposed by Penrose. This will falsify his specific model of gravity-induced single world, and would thus be a reason to update toward MWI, though there is still no contradiction with the orthodox (unitary evolution+Born rule) prescription, unless the cantilever remains in the superposition of states after the measurement (not a chance in hell).
The cantilever remains in a single state, despite the predictions of gravity-less QM. This is by far a more interesting outcome, as it would for the first time show the macroscopic limits of the quantum world. This would score a point for gravity-influenced decoherence and single world, and would be a significant blow to MWI.
There is always a chance that the experiment will show something else entirely, which would be even more exciting.
http://www.scottaaronson.com/blog/?p=1103
Eliezer's gung-ho attitude about the realism of the Many Worlds Interpretation always rubbed me the wrong way, especially in the podcast between both him and Scott (around 8:43 in http://bloggingheads.tv/videos/2220). I've seen a similar sentiment expressed before about the MWI sequences. And I say that still believing it to be the most seemingly correct of the available interpretations.
I feel Scott's post does an excellent job grounding it as a possibly correct, and in-principle falsifiable interpretation.