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lmm comments on False vacuum: the universe playing quantum suicide - Less Wrong Discussion

16 Post author: Stuart_Armstrong 09 January 2013 05:04PM

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Comment author: lmm 18 November 2013 12:47:24PM 2 points [-]

Ridiculous idea: maybe that's why we don't see any superpartners in particle accelerators.

Comment author: private_messaging 22 November 2013 11:11:32AM *  2 points [-]

Or more interestingly it may occur in very ordinary circumstances - the vacuum does not have to be even metastable. Think of an (idealized) pin standing on it's tip, on a glass plane. Suppose that whole thing is put on a moving train - for any train trajectory, there is an initial position for the pin so that it will not fall. That pin would seem to behave quite mysteriously - leaning back just before the train starts braking, etc - even though the equations of motion are very simple. Seems like a good way to specify apparently complicated behaviours compactly and elegantly.

(edit2: Rather than seeing it as worlds being destroyed, I'd see this as an mathematically elegant single world universe, or a mathematically elegant way to link quantum amplitudes to probabilities (which are the probabilities that the one surviving world will have such and such observations) )