I'm aware of that. I mean that there are fewer effectively different worlds than that. Like, if you consider a scattering event - a major source of decoherence and thus new world formation.
With which other particle will this particle's next interaction (over some minimal threshold of impulse) occur, cut off by time X in some reference frame (e.g. our frame, right now)? (setting aside the fact that particles don't have individual identities, since that would decrease the world count)
This is a stronger question than that asked by decoherence, but you can already see we've narrowed it down to something that seems like picking out of a list - even if the universe is infinite, the number of particles in a truncated future light cone is finite.
Of course you're doing this a huge number of times, and each one creates a huge number of alternatives, but that's just making an unimaginably huge finite number. See?
[Crossposted]
Initially attracted to Less Wrong by Eliezer Yudkowsky's intellectual boldness in his "infinite-sets atheism," I've waited patiently to discover its rationale. Sometimes it's said that our "intuitions" speak for infinity or against, but how could one, in a Kahneman-appropriate manner, arrive at intuitions about whether the cosmos is infinite? Intuitions about infinite sets might arise from an analysis of the concept of actually realized infinities. This is a distinctively philosophical form of analysis and one somewhat alien to Less Wrong, but it may be the only way to gain purchase on this neglected question. I'm by no means certain of my reasoning; I certainly don't think I've settled the issue. But for reasons I discuss in this skeletal argument, the conceptual—as opposed to the scientific or mathematical—analysis of "actually realized infinities" has been largely avoided, and I hope to help begin a necessary discussion.
1. The actuality of infinity is a paramount metaphysical issue.
2. The principle of the identity of indistinguishables applies to physics and to sets, not to everything conceivable.
3. Arguments against actually existing infinite sets.
A. Argument based on brute distinguishability.
B. Argument based on probability as limiting relative frequency.
4. The nonexistence of actually realized infinite sets and the principle of the identity of indistinguishable sets together imply the Gold model of the cosmos.