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The best thing to do is not see them - if someone sees one, it forces a collapse of the wavefunction and makes the path of the asteroid become certain, at which point it may hit us. If we avoid seeing it, it will remain uncertain as to where it is so it can miss us and hit us at the same time, and then we'll continue to exist in a universe where it missed.
so I vote for installing solar sails.
Quote from: David Cooper on 15/02/2013 20:45:00The best thing to do is not see them - if someone sees one, it forces a collapse of the wavefunction and makes the path of the asteroid become certain, at which point it may hit us. If we avoid seeing it, it will remain uncertain as to where it is so it can miss us and hit us at the same time, and then we'll continue to exist in a universe where it missed.Sorry, but if you're not just joking around then you must not have a very good understanding of quantum mechanics.. You're missing some important facts. For macroscopic ovbjects the uncertainties become certainties. Where there was an absense of trajectories now has the ani
The end of your post appears to be missing. But no - it is not clear that macroscopic objects can't be in highly uncertain states, and it's possible that they are forced to take up more certain states when observed by something complex like a mind which cannot sustain the same uncertain state in the course of processing the data. The very act of processing the data may force a simplification of the data (meaning that its state must become more certain) and this may force the real object to simplify too to conform to the certainty of the data.
Could one nudge an asteroid off course with a powerful laser?