Scott Mayers wrote:Leo and Hobbes, you both seemed to miss my argument as your accusation of my interpretation of 'determinism'/'indeterminism' as being misconstrued was my point in mentioning how it is being misinterpreted based on multitple definitions existing using the same words. That is, determinism may refer to either that which a human can use to predict something OR to how Nature itself assures something.
You also miss the fact that my inclusion of multiple universes is to recognize that nature has proven to contain variables, not simply constants. Our particular universe we are in may appear perfectly constant with respect to order, but when we think of possibilities, there are an infinite possible routes of how one frame becomes another in time (both forward and backwards.) If you begin at point A and given another frame at point B, the shortest route may seem like the only way to get there. But you can posit another point X anywhere such that point A becomes point X which then becomes point B.
I posit multiple universes as an indeterminate and infinite set of possible realities that don't require essential existence as we understand it. A world that you might simply make up, for instance, really DOES exist somewhere in totality as a universe unto its own. But where they may 'exist' could be such that they create worlds that lack consistent formulations and so close themselves off as incomplete. If I said that I have nothing in my pocket, for instance, it assures that the unit 'nothing' is infinitely variable and real with respect to the meaning of "nothing" as a unit. So I can also be true by saying that I have a unicorn in my pocket too among an infinite set of things considered "unreal."
Your assessment of what Leo and I are trying to say is false.
You have no need to posit a multiple universes theory as it simply does no work.
There are not an infinite set of possibilities. .
Possibility is a musing about the inevitable outcome of the Universe, where all antecedent conditions can never be known, but given assessments about previous known conditions.
For example. We might say that there is a 90% possibility for rain, as the current conditions are similar to previous conditions when it did rain. But the actual condition of rain is not about what
we think is possible but about the ACTUAL conditions of the environment.
To assert that for every possibility, there has to be a new universe, is completely absurd anthropomorphism. The universe does not give a fuck about what we think is possible.