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You can go on adding untestable hypotheses ad lib, until you end up with a religion. This will give you an excuse to kill people, so I won't encourage it by continuing an otherwise pointless discussion.
What has anything here to do with religion ?
Quote from: Valen on 02/11/2018 11:05:17What has anything here to do with religion ?It asks a poorly phrased question, then pretends that there is something mystical about the lack of a clear answer.
Multiverse does not necessary refer to the many worlds theory, I used that term because we are not 100% certain that other universes couldn't influence events in this universe.
But I think that the true issue is that no measurement can differentiate between an unpredictable event and a true random one, those 2 will generate similar data. While off course unpredictability does not prove true randomness.
It is similar in how no measurement could differentiate between randomness and free will, they will generate similar data.
Found the best answer until now:"To say that the randomness of quantum phenomena is coming from somewhere/something is to assert what physicists call a hidden variable theory.
" ... In such a theory, there would be apparent randomness, but there are hidden variables we are not yet aware of (for lack of better knowledge of physics, lack of better measurement equipment, etc...) which if known would provide a deterministic explanation of the apparent randomness.
" ... John Bell proved in his 1964 paper (Bell's theorem) that no local hidden variable theory can reproduce the results of quantum mechanics.
" ... You might say "well fine, locality is not essential". But the consequences of non locality for causality are seen by some as even more disturbing than quantum randomness.
The many worlds theory does not remove true randomness, the paths of an observer are still randomly selected.
Does true randomness exist? Imagine an omniscient being, who does know all variables of all particles, it even knows all variables of particles that humans can't measure without changing those particles. This being has a perfect understanding of everything and infinite calculating power. Can this being predict the future or does true randomness exist?
"you cannot know the position and momentum of an object simultaneously to an indefinite degree of precision",
And I think you will find that 22 = 4 with absolute certainty.