Not sure “worldline” is the best word, because each observer-moment exists in many locations at once, each having many possible pasts and futures. So I think of an observer-moment as a “chorus” of locations in Tegmark V.
From the perspective taken in this post, “location” means observer-moment: the entire submanifold of “simultaneous” locations in your sense is represented by a single point in the space I mean.
(To be sure, both your space and mine are “Tegmark V” spaces; “Tegmark V” here is not a specific mathematical object, but an interpretation-type.)
yes, a worldine requires a somewhat restricted structure, which you are not going to get in level IV, let alone V. Also, the OP never explain what worldlines have to do with agents, or what the advantage of this way of thinking is.
Not sure “worldline” is the best word, because each observer-moment exists in many locations at once, each having many possible pasts and futures. So I think of an observer-moment as a “chorus” of locations in Tegmark V.
From the perspective taken in this post, “location” means observer-moment: the entire submanifold of “simultaneous” locations in your sense is represented by a single point in the space I mean.
(To be sure, both your space and mine are “Tegmark V” spaces; “Tegmark V” here is not a specific mathematical object, but an interpretation-type.)
A subsequent post may provide helpful context.
yes, a worldine requires a somewhat restricted structure, which you are not going to get in level IV, let alone V. Also, the OP never explain what worldlines have to do with agents, or what the advantage of this way of thinking is.
Is each chorus in T5 also a point in T5?