Followup to: Poll: What value extra copies?
For those of you who didn't follow Eliezer's Quantum Physics Sequence, let me reiterate that there is something very messed up about the universe we live in. Specifically, the Many Worlds Interpretation (MWI) of quantum mechanics states that our entire classical world gets copied something like 1040±20 times per second1. You are not a line through time, but a branching tree.
If you think carefully about Descartes' "I think therefore I am" type skepticism, and approach your stream of sensory observations from such a skeptical point of view, you should note that if you really were just one branch-line in a person-tree, it would feel exactly the same as if you were a unique person-line through time, because looking backwards, a tree looks like a line, and your memory can only look backwards.
However, the rules of quantum mechanics mean that the integral of the modulus squared of the amplitude density, ∫|Ψ|2, is conserved in the copying process. Therefore, the tree that is you has branches that get thinner (where thickness is ∫|Ψ|2 over the localized density "blob" that represents that branch) as they branch off. In fact they get thinner in such a way that if you gathered them together into a bundle, the bundle would be as thick as the trunk it came from.
Now, since each copying event creates a slightly different classical universe, the copies in each of the sub-branches will each experience random events going differently. This means that over a timescale of decades, they will be totally "different" people, with different jobs, probably different partners and will live in different places though they will (of course) have your DNA, approximate physical appearance, and an identical history up until the time they branched off. For timescales on the order of a day, I suspect that almost all of the copies will be virtually identical to you, even down to going to bed at the same time, having exactly the same schedule that day, thinking almost all of the same thoughts etc.
MWI mixes copies and probability
When a "random" event happens, either the event was pseudorandom (like a large digit of pi) or it was a copy event, meaning that both (or all) outcomes were realized elsewhere in the wavefunction. This means that in many situations, when you say "there is a probability p of event X happening", what this really means is "proportion p of my copy-children will experience X".
LW doesn't care about copies
In Poll: What value extra copies?, I asked what value people placed upon non-interacting extra copies of themselves, asking both about lock-step identical and statistically identical copies. The overwhelming opinion was that neither were of much value. For example, Sly comments:2
"I would place 0 value on a copy that does not interact with me. This might be odd, but a copy of me that is non-interacting is indistinguishable from a copy of someone else that is non-interacting. Why does it matter that it is a copy of me?"
How to get away with attempted murder
Suppose you throw a grenade with a quantum detonator at Sly. The detonator will sample a qbit in an even superposition of states 1 and 0. On a 0 it explodes, instantly vaporizing sly (it's a very powerful grenade). On a 1, it defuses the grenade and dispenses a $100 dollar note. Suppose that you throw it and observe that it doesn't explode:
(A) does Sly charge you with attempted murder, or does he thank you for giving him $100 in exchange for something that had no value to him anyway?
(B) if he thanks you for the free $100, does he ask for another one of those nice free hundred dollar note dispensers? (This is the "quantum suicide" option
(C) if he says "the one you've already given me was great, but no more please", then presumably if you throw another one against his will, he will thank you for the free $100 again. And so on ad infinitum. Sly is temporally inconsistent if this option is chosen.
The punch line is that the physics we run on gives us a very strong reason to care about the welfare of copies of ourselves, which is (according to my survey) a counter-intuitive result.
EDIT: Quite a few people are biting the quantum suicide bullet. I think I'll have to talk about that next. Also, Wei Dai summarizes:
Another way to think about this is that many of us seem to share the follow three intuitions about non-interacting extra copies, out of which we have to give up at least one to retain logical consistency:
- We value extra copies in other quantum branches.
- We don't value extra copies that are just spatially separated from us (and are not too far away).
- We ought to value both kinds of copies the same way.
- Giving up 1 is the position of "quantum immortality".
- Giving up 2 seems to be Roko's position in this post.
- Giving up 3 would imply that our values are rather arbitrary: there seems to be no morally relevant differences between these two kinds of copies, so why should we value one and not the other? But according to the "complexity of value" position, perhaps this isn't really a big problem.
I might add a fourth option that many people in the comments seem to be going after: (4) We don't intrinsically value copies in other branches, we just have a subjective anticipation of becoming them.
1: The copying events are not discrete, rather they consist of a continuous deformation of probability amplitude in state space, but the shape of that deformation looks a lot like a continuous approximation to a discrete copying event, and the classical rules of physics approximately govern the time evolution of the "copies" as if they were completely independent. This last statement is the phenomenon of decoherence. The uncertainty in the copying rate is due to my ignorance, and I would welcome a physicist correcting me.
2: There were many others who expressed roughly similar views, and I don't hold it as a "black mark" to pick the option that I am advising against, rather I encourage people to honestly put forward their opinions in a spirit of communal learning.
I think the situation with regard to MWI 'copies' is different from that with regard to multiple copies existing in the same Everett branch, or in a classical universe.
I can't fully explain why, but I think that when, through decoherence, the universe splits into two or more 'worlds', each of which are assigned probability weights that (as nearly as makes no difference) behave like classical probabilities, it's rational to act as though the Copenhagen interpretation was (as nearly as makes no difference) true. Strictly speaking the Copenhagen interpretation is incoherent, but still you should act as though, in a "quantum suicide" scenario, there is probability p that you will 'cease to exist', rather than a probability 1 that a copy of you will go on existing but 'tagged' with the information 'norm square amplitude of this copy is [1-p times that of the pre-existing person]'.
My rationale is roughly as follows: Suppose the universe were governed by laws of physics that were 'indeterministic' in the sense of describing the evolution over time of a classical probability distribution. Then if we want to, we can still pretend that there is a multiverse, that physics is deterministic, that all possible worlds exist with a certain probability density etc. And clearly the difference between a 'single universe' and a 'multiverse' view is 'metaphysical' in the sense that no experiment can tell them apart. Here I want to be a verificationist and say that there is no 'fact of the matter' as to which interpretation is true. Therefore, the question of how to act rationally shouldn't depend on this.
When we move from classical indeterminism to quantum indeterminism the probabilities get replaced by complex-valued 'amplitudes' but for reasons I struggle to articulate, I think the fact that the universe is 'nearly' classical means that our prescriptions for rational action must be 'nearly' the same as they would have been in a classical universe.
As for sly, he should act as though he has luckily survived an event that had a 1/2 chance of killing him ('once and for all', 'irrevocably' etc). Presumably he would charge you with something, though I'm not sure whether 'attempted murder' is what you'd be guilty of.
Interesting. You seem to be saying that if the laws of physics appeared to be nondeterministic, there would be no way to be sure they don't actually create copies instead.
I think this is correct, with the caveat that the laws of physics for this universe do not appear to work that way. However, the map is not the territory - not knowing how the laws work does not mean there is no fact of how they work. Even so, assuming that the rational course action differs between these situations, the best you can do is assign a prior to both (Solomonoff prior will do,... (read more)