2) Why does |U1> have a probability of .36 and why does |U2> have a probability of .64?
Because the wavefunction is, first and foremost, an object in a Hilbert space satisfying an L^2 conservation law, so the only legitimate way to define its "size" or "degree of reality" is the L^2 norm.
the only legitimate way to define its "size" or "degree of reality" is the L^2 norm
"Degree of reality" - an interesting concept, especially when employed as an explanation of why some things happen more often than others. Why does this coin come up heads twice as often as it comes up tails? Because coming up heads has twice the "degree of reality" of coming up tails. Funny, they both felt equally real when they happened...
Face it: if you are going to assert that the observed frequencies of physical events are exp...
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 )