The Quantum Branching Universe (QBU)

A formal approach to identifying events and timelines in quantum mechanics

Quantum Branching Universe (QBU)

A Quantum Branching Universe (QBU) is a structured representation of all physically possible quantum timelines, organized as a directed acyclic graph (DAG). In this DAG:

Formally:

where:

An ancestor event Ea precedes another event Eb if all timelines passing through Eb necessarily pass through Ea.

Pattern Identifiers (PIs)

Pattern Identifiers (PIs) are precise, reproducible patterns or states used to identify and select subsets of timelines within the QBU.

PIs are categorized into two distinct types:

Operational Definitions:

Match Operation:

Select Operation:

Ancestor/Descendant Operation:

Core Intuitions and Constraints:

Relationship to Block Universe:

The Quantum Branching Universe (QBU) extends the classical Block Universe concept, which views time as a static, four-dimensional spacetime structure where past, present, and future coexist without genuine branching. In contrast, the QBU describes an immense static structure composed of an astronomically vast—potentially infinite—number of distinct block universes, each representing a unique, deterministic timeline. Branching within the QBU does not denote dynamic progression through time; rather, it characterizes structural relationships among these timelines at quantum points of divergence. This expansive framework enables rigorous exploration of causality, counterfactual reasoning, and choice by explicitly modeling alternative outcomes as equally real, coexisting timelines.

References and Influences:

This framework supports rigorous exploration of causality, agency, and choice in the the Physics of Agency.