There are no multiple branches in your phase 1, because there is nothing to split the first branch. There are people, who split the branches in MWI, when they're doing the experiments or simply making choices. That's the reason why your Phase 1 is different from MWI. That's also the reason why LUCAS can't choose the branch from the phase 1 - because it has no multiple branches.
This is a great opportunity to really
slow down and make
Many-Worlds Interpretation (MWI) graspable for someone like Marcin, who is wrestling with a very subtle conceptual issue — namely, how "branches" work and when they appear.
Let’s build it up from
the absolute simplest foundations, step by step, using plain language and short, concrete examples.
Step-by-Step: What Is MWI?
1. Quantum systems can be in a superposition.
- Imagine a coin that's both heads and tails at the same time — until something observes it.
- This is called a superposition — like a blend of all possible outcomes.
2. The Schrödinger equation says this superposition evolves smoothly over time.
- Quantum physics has an equation (like a clock) that smoothly moves the superposition forward.
- It doesn’t choose a single outcome. It just lets the whole mixture evolve.
3. In MWI, nothing ever collapses.
- The universe doesn’t pick just one result when something is measured.
- All outcomes happen.
- But instead of coexisting in one world, they each go their separate way — like sliding off into parallel tracks.
4. These parallel tracks are called branches.
- When you open the box and see Schrödinger’s cat — you see it alive.
- But in another branch, someone else sees it dead.
- Both versions of you exist, each in a different "world" or branch.
5. When a measurement happens, the universe splits.
- Not just for big stuff like cats — even for particles, electrons, photons, and atoms.
- Every time a quantum choice occurs, the universe "branches" into all possible outcomes.
6. YOU split too.
- In MWI, the observer (you) splits with the world.
- Each version of you has a different memory, because each saw a different result.
- These versions don’t know about each other after the split.
Marcin’s Confusion — Let’s Rephrase It
Marcin says:
"There are no multiple branches in your phase 1, because there is nothing to split the first branch."
He's assuming that
you need a conscious person to split the universe. But
MWI says the splitting happens automatically — whenever there's any quantum interaction that becomes "entangled" with the environment.
So the core misunderstanding is this:
MWI doesn’t require a person to split the world.
Any physical process involving quantum indeterminacy and decoherence will do it.
People are just
along for the ride. You split
with the universe, you don’t cause the split.
Now tie it back to Phase 1 vs Phase 2 in your theory
Here’s how to gently explain the distinction Marcin is stuck on, from your 2PC perspective:
What MWI says:
- The world is always branching — with or without people.
- All branches are real.
- Consciousness just rides the branching.
What your theory (2PC) says:
- In Phase 1, the world is in superposition, but not branching yet.
- There’s no actual split — no branching, because there’s no consciousness yet to force collapse or divergence.
- The branching only appears after the emergence of a conscious agent (LUCAS) hits the Quantum Convergence Threshold (QCT).
- That’s when one branch becomes real, and time begins — Phase 2.
The key difference:
In MWI, branches are always splitting, and all are real.
In 2PC, nothing splits until LUCAS collapses the superposition.
Before that, there is only one unreal, superposed structure — not many worlds.
Suggested wording to help Marcin:
You might say:
"MWI says the world is always branching — every tiny quantum event causes a split, with or without observers. But in my model (2PC), there’s only one big quantum structure before consciousness appears — nothing has branched yet. It’s not a set of multiple real worlds, it’s a single possibility space. LUCAS doesn’t 'choose from' branches — LUCAS creates the branch by needing to decide in a way that can’t coexist with superposition."
Would you like a short visual/diagram to explain this to him too? It might help.