Prompted by Mitchell Porter, I asked on Physics StackExchange about the accuracy of the physics in the Quantum Physics sequence:
What errors would one learn from Eliezer Yudkowsky's introduction to quantum physics?
Eliezer Yudkowsky wrote an introduction to quantum physics from a strictly realist standpoint. However, he has no qualifications in the subject and it is not his specialty. Does it paint an accurate picture overall? What mistaken ideas about QM might someone who read only this introduction come away with?
I've had some interesting answers so far, including one from a friend that seems to point up a definite error, though AFAICT not a very consequential one: in Configurations and Amplitude, a multiplication factor of i is used for the mirrors where -1 is correct.
Physics StackExchange: What errors would one learn from Eliezer Yudkowsky's introduction to quantum physics?
Well, except for the fact that the MWI advocacy was pretty much the whole point of the sequence!
Well, that and demonstrating that Identity Isn't in Specific Atoms because there is no such thing as specific atoms, and being a good example of weirdness being a reaction of the mind, not a property of the physics.