“Many worlds can be seen as a kind of non-local theory, as the nature of the theory assumes a specific time line of “simultaneity” along which the universe can “split” at an instant.”
As I understand, no it doesn’t. The universe split is also local, and if at a difference at point A preserves the same particles at point B, then at point B we only have the same universe (where at point A we have multiple). The configurations merge together. It’s more like vibration than splitting into paths that go into different directions. Macroscopic physics is inherently predictable, meaning that all the multiple worlds ultimately end up doing roughly the same thing!
Except for that one hypothetical universe where I saw a glass of boiling water spontaneously freeze into an ice block.
I’m going to guess the fact I’m not in that universe and as far as we know no-one has ever been, has something to do with the Born probabilities.
As far as ethical implications go, the vibration visualization helps me sort it out. The other existing me’s are not more ethically distinct from each other than ‘me a second ago’ is ethically distinct from ‘me a second later’. They are literally the same person, me. Any other me would do the same thing this me is doing, because there’s no reason for it to be otherwise (if quantum phenomena had random effects on macroscopic scale, the world would be a lot more random and a lot less predictable on the everyday level), so we’re still overlapping. All the uncountable other me’s are sitting in the same chair I am (also smeared/vibrating), typing the same words I am, and making typos and quickly backspacing to erase them on the same smeared/vibrating keyboard.
All of the smearing has absolutely no effect a lightyear away from me, because the year it would take for any effect from my vibration over here to get to there hasn’t passed yet. It has its own vibration, and I’m not affected by that one either.
“Many worlds” but same universe.
the magic part.
Bad / insufficiently curiosed-through advice is often infuriating because the person giving it seems to be assuming you’re an idiot / have come to them as soon as you noticed the problem. Which is very rarely true! Generally, between spotting the problem and talking to another person about it, there’s a pretty fucking long solution-seeking stage. Where “pretty fucking long” can be anything between ten minutes (“i lost my pencil and can’t find it )=”) (where actually common sense suggestions MIGHT be helpful—you might not have through up all the checklist yet) and THE PERSON’S ENTIRE LIFETIME (anything relating to a disability, for example).
An advice-giver who doesn’t understand why you still have the problem is going to have a lot more advice to give, and they’re also often going to be SO patronizing and idiocy-assuming and invalidating sounding.
As opposed to the person who is at the point of “ok yeah that does sound like a problem” first, before they might move on with “hmm but what to do though” along with you.
(You might well be ahead of them anyway, but at least they’ve listened first!)