Episode 36: David Albert on Quantum Measurement and the Problems with Many-Worlds

Quantum mechanics is our best theory of how reality works at a fundamental level, yet physicists still can't agree on what the theory actually says. At the heart of the puzzle is the "measurement problem": what actually happens when we observe a quantum system, and why do we apparently need separate rules when it happens? David Albert is one of the leading figures in the foundations of quantum mechanics today, and we discuss the measurement problem and why it's so puzzling. Then we dive into the Many-Worlds version of quantum mechanics, which is my favorite (as I explain in my forthcoming book Something Deeply Hidden). It is not David's favorite, so he presents the case as to why you should be skeptical of Many-Worlds. (The philosophically respectable case, that is, not a vague unease at all those other universes.)

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David Albert received his Ph.D. in physics from Rockefeller University. He is currently the Frederick E. Woodbridge Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University. His research involves a number of topics within the foundations of physics, including the arrow of time (coining the phrase "Past Hypothesis" for the low-entropy state of the early universe) and quantum mechanics. He is the author of a number of books, including Time and Chance, Quantum Mechanics and Experience, and After Physics.

22 thoughts on “Episode 36: David Albert on Quantum Measurement and the Problems with Many-Worlds”

  1. I testify that I would prefer to play Everettian Quantum Russian Roulette over Non-Everettian Quantum Russian Roulette. Does this qualify as a counter to the decision-theoretic argument? Regardless, I hope no one will be Putin a gun to my head and forcing me to play any version of Russian Roulette.

  2. Nonlocal Hidden Variable

    Reminds me of a video podcast of Sean Carroll’s dinner party where they finally get to test the many world’s interpretation. Link below

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QTvqBmO6rHA

    If they would have made additional measurements fast enough then it would stop the universes from branching. Rookie mistake. But is the fatastic many world’s interpretation and the Copenhagen interpretation crowding out other ideas? I might as well be debating the existence of heaven and hell.

  3. There is one rather trivial connection between Hume and the measurement problem. Something along the lines said in a recent comment (https://www.scottaaronson.com/blog/?p=4045#comment-1801365) on Sebastian Oberhoff’s “Incompleteness ex machina” guest post on Scott Aaronson’s blog:

    Of course Hume is right that justifying induction by its success in the past is circular. Of course Copenhagen is right that describing measurements in terms of unitary quantum mechanics is circular. Of course Poincaré is right that defining the natural numbers as finite strings of digits is circular. (… simplified those subtle philosophical positions to such objectionable short statements…)

    But this circularity is somehow trivial, it doesn’t really count. It does make sense to use induction, describing measurement in terms of unitary quantum mechanics does clarify things, and the natural numbers are really well defined. But why?

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  6. The argument with two individuals in exactly the same brain state (toward the end of the podcast) is fallacious. Whether we say there is one individual in two locations, or two identical individuals, is meaningless.

  7. There must be something about Albert’s objection relating to linear combinations of preferences I don’t understand. If I say I prefer $100 over $1, with no preference to world A or B, I have simply left out any cross-preference (e.g. In the case where I have $100 I prefer A to B and vice-versa). It isn’t that a cross-preference suddenly springs into existence when we consider quantum mechanics. It’s just that you forgot to ask me about that the first time!

    In other words, consider two bits that are going to be assigned by some truly random process. I might declare that I prefer the first bit to contain a 1 and have no preference for the second. If you later tell me that you’ve written an algorithm that takes the random input and assigns the bits in a way that the outcomes are correlated, I might say “hey wait, you didn’t ask me whether I cared about correlated outcomes!” I certainly wouldn’t say “You broke probability.” It isn’t necessary to invoke qubits to recreate Albert’s example. And, indeed, if you asked me about by preferences with respect to two qubits they should reduce to some function over the states my future selves would *actually* observe. I will never directly experience a linear combination of states, so why would I have a preference about it?!

  8. Jeffrey Freed: it’s not meaningless. If one individual is in two locations then that individual has incompatible properties (that of being in location A and not being in location A). If it’s two individuals then there are no incompatible properties.

  9. Devin Morse: What am I missing here? 1:30:26 A person asks, “I wonder if I will be the one on the right or the one on the left just after the split?” How can there be a fact of the matter? The assignment is completely arbitrary since by hypothesis they have exactly the same experience, being in precisely the same brain state. I would say there is one person in two locations. Of course, they will develop into different individuals thereafter, each with an equally valid claim to have been the original person before the split. So, if the distinction cannot be made, doesn’t that mean that there is no perceptible difference between the branching and the non-branching scenarios?

  10. Albert’s Ph.D. dissertation story is strange. He worked on his dissertation for a couple of years, was asked to make minor revisions as many are asked to do, but he refused and was granted the Ph.D. anyway?

  11. Here’s my problem with the Everettian branch idea. Say I’m going to measure a quantum result that has two possible values – spin up or spin down. According to Everett everything is determined, and both outcomes occur. Also in a determined fashion there are now two of me, one for each outcome. ONE of me, though, is different. It is the one that “I” am aware of and the one that sees spin up. My question – what exactly is this “awareness center”, or whatever you want to call it, that is only aware of spin up? If our consciousnesses are strictly emergent features of brain activity, what is the difference that causes “me” to be aware of only one branch? And what is this “me”?

  12. Wow, this was an astoundingly good discussion. I hope you have him back on. Looking forward to your book.

  13. I would argue that if we live in an Everettian many-worlds, our normal understanding of decision theory and probability theory doesn’t hold anymore. We can not think in terms of probabilities because we can not repeat the same measurement twice and there is no way of knowing the statistical probability of state A vs state B.

    When thinking about a person’s binary decision as a world-branching event there are 3 people involved. The one that not made a decision yet, the one that chose state A and the one that chose state B. But there is no correlation between the undecided person and person A or B. They are completely separate. This makes the question ‘What’s the chance you will be person A or B’ irrelevant. It’s an invalid question. You could say person A and B both were the undecided person, but not the other way.

  14. I’m not sure but I think I share Dbritt’s confusion here.

    How could you possibly have new preferences when offered multiple branches of reality when you are still only going to end up in one of them?

    The only new fact you’ve given me with this new version of reality is that there is another person experiencing the other state of the universe when the branch happened. Except I have no interaction whatsoever with that person who is almost identical to me but isn’t, nor their universe. So it seems strange that my decision making logic would want to maximize something in that universe too. That would be a very esoteric sort of preference.

  15. Logothetis Sylvia

    But why shouldnt it be possible.Multiple personalities are possible. Multiple worlda are possible.We are in the mind f.i. somewhere else, love other poeple, communicate with others.Past and present and future are different worldw. We seek the sameness, the equality or the worlds in order to identify ourselves in it. In Pakistan, we want to be and behave like pakistans etc. Besides the time-space theory can also make a person or its idol exist in tow worlds. There is needed more research..

  16. David Albert says, “These non-branching options are just a tiny fraction of the actual options you have once branching is put on the table. Where did you get the idea that you could infer everything about your preferences among the branching cases from your preferences among the non-branching cases?” My counter to this is that we are in deep trouble if our decision theory depends on which interpretation of quantum mechanics is correct. Can’t wave function collapse produce the same amount of indeterminacy with respect to whether I am fat or thin that MWI produces? Why does his argument correlate two outcomes in one theory but not in the other, if all four combinations of the two variables are possible in both? The branching and non-branching options ought to be the same for either theory, or else there must be something more deeply wrong.

  17. This is a fascinating topic for discussion. It seems that there is a rather desperate effort to preserve determinism no matter how far-fetched the many worlds scenario appears to be. If it is true that quantum effects are the M.O. of brains, then every decision made has two outcomes – one in this world and the opposite in a different world. Suppose that I stand on a curb at a busy intersection, and am tempted to try to beat the traffic in a rush to the other side. I decide that it is too dangerous, but my double in the other universe decides to dash across and is killed. Does another double appear for the next decision?
    It seems to me that, considering Occam’s razor, the simpler explanation is that the decision I make settles the question and there is no double in another world. Why is free will so hard to accept?

  18. When one looks at the amount of quantum activity that can take place in the time frame of inflation and (hot) big bang, all the unsustainable versions of the universe could have appeared and annihilated in the process spinning out this one. There would be no fossils and no multi-anything leftovers for us to detect. Thus, our is not the anthropic universe, it is the sustainable universe. It is Darwinian.

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