This is the crux of the issue. What do you gain by favoring one over another? My original point was that there is little to be gained.
I suppose one would only gain a simpler theory, since both theories predict the same thing. So from the perspective of neatness, I'd prefer to have one less postulate. From the persepctive of actually solving problems, none of this matters.
In fact, none of my professors throughout college ever brought up the topic of interpretation, except to say that it was complicated. I suppose that's why I don't sound like a grad student to you; though I can solve problems very well, everything I know about the interpretations of the theory I have gleaned from textbooks and the internet; I have yet to look at specific papers, or study it in depth.
Part of the reason I want to write more on this is to have an excuse to force myself to learn/study more on the issue; it is still possible to change my mind, after all.
Though on the issue of reversibility; if we accept the mind is capable of being simulated by a computer, and we had a computer that was made of Toffoli gates (or the quantum version, if such a thing exists), would that mind not then be reversible?
And thanks for pointing out my error on the use of ad hominem; I always forget that.
I suppose one would only gain a simpler theory, since both theories predict the same thing. So from the perspective of neatness, I'd prefer to have one less postulate. From the perspective of actually solving problems, none of this matters.
Right.
...In fact, none of my professors throughout college ever brought up the topic of interpretation, except to say that it was complicated. I suppose that's why I don't sound like a grad student to you; though I can solve problems very well, everything I know about the interpretations of the theory I have gleaned f
Sean Carroll, physicist and proponent of Everettian Quantum Mechanics, has just posted a new article going over some of the common objections to EQM and why they are false. Of particular interest to us as rationalists:
Very reminiscent of the quantum physics sequence here! I find that this distinction between number of entities and number of postulates is something that I need to remind people of all the time.
META: This is my first post; if I have done anything wrong, or could have done something better, please tell me!