Philosophy of Physics Seminar: Jer Steeger (Bristol)

Philosophy of Physics Seminar: Jer Steeger (Bristol) - Everettian chance in no uncertain terms (with James Read)

Abstract:

The current landscape of views on the role of chance in the Everett interpretation is rocky. Everettians (Wallace 2012, Sebens and Carroll 2018, McQueen and Vaidman 2019) agree that chance values should be derived using principles governing uncertain or partial belief, but cannot agree on how. Critics (Baker 2007, Dawid and Thébault 2015, Mandolesi 2019) maintain that any such approach is circular. We smooth the landscape by shifting focus from what Everettians take to be uncertain to what they should think is certain: namely, the conditions under which branches are isolated. Our approach to isolation resolves the main tensions among the different Everettian chance derivations while clarifying how they avoid circularity.

For those who saw me give an early version of this talk in the Fall: this time, I'll be focusing more on the high-level relationship between reasoning with the principle of indifference and symmetry-based chance derivations for physical theories.

Organiser: Rami Jreige (rami.jreige@bristol.ac.uk)

For up to date details, see https://www.bristol.ac.uk/philosophy/events/events-calendar/