Re: particles have free will

Posted by Victoria Hughes on
URL: http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/particles-have-free-will-tp2655680p2657992.html

The Multiverse and many of the variations and questions loping back  
and forth here have been asked and addressed, with paradigm-consistent  
explanations, in contemporary Buddhist texts. See Robert Thurman, for  
example.
I am reminded of the saying 'a weed is just a plant we haven't found a  
use for yet' when I hear these kinds of discussions. Explanations from  
other disciplines standing in for the unwanted weed, dontcha know.
Our approaches to these questions come from many directions and move  
towards this strange attractor of the 'multiverse'. And these  
approaches are not as far apart as one might, ahem, think. Artichokes,  
anyone?
Tory


On Apr 18, 2009, at 8:35 PM, russell standish wrote:

> On Sat, Apr 18, 2009 at 01:12:09PM -0700, Russ Abbott wrote:
>> Occam must be holding his head.
>>
>> -- Russ
>>
>
> It is a mistake to think Occam's razor rejects the Multiverse. In fact
> the opposite situation is true - Occam's razor is a reason for
> preferring the Multiverse. Many people have discussed this (under
> terms like zero information principle, or minimum information
> principle), but you could take a look at my book Theory of Nothing,
> which is a free download. Apologies for the plug.
>
> --
>
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