Either you specify what parts of the wavefunction correspond to observable reality, and then you fail to comply with relativity and the Born rule, or else you don't specify what parts of the wavefunction correspond to observable reality, and then you fail to have a theory.
If you spent as much energy actually trying to understand what MWI actually means as you do trying to argue against it, we wouldn't have to play Karma Whack-A-Mole every time you start spouting nonsense on here.
Very well; I ask you to exhibit one, just one, example of a wavefunction in which you can (1) specify which parts are the "worlds" / "branches" / whatever-you-call-them (2) explain how it is that those parts are relativistically covariant (3) explain why it is that one branch can have an unequal probability compared to another branch, when they are both equally real.
These are extracts from some Facebook comments I made recently. I don't think they're actually understandable as is—they're definitely not formal and there isn't an actual underlying formalism I'm referring to, just commonly held intuitions. Or at least intuitions commonly held by me. Ahem. But anyway I figure it's worth a shot.
A proposal to
rationalizederive magick and miracles from updateless-like decision theoretic assumptions:(On Google+ I list my occupation as "Theoretical Thaumaturgist". ;P )