Copernicus
Industrial Grade Linguist
I'm not a physicist, but I know enough about science to know the difference between results and interpretation of those results. Interpretation is about supporting a causal model that predicts the observed results. The problem with quantum mechanics is that it is so weird that it drives scientists half mad trying to come up with coherent explanations of what is going on. ("Shut up and calculate!") So there are a number of competing interpretations out there that are more or less popular to explain quantum indeterminacy. When you start talking about "random events", you are jumping to the conclusion that they are truly random, as opposed to merely unpredictable. There are actually interpretations that are popular alternatives to the idea that the unpredictable behavior is indeed "random". My layman's reading of Everett's...The choice of breakfast is a macro event that is not usually very strongly affected by random quantum effects. So in practice, you're 99.9999...% sure to have fish for breakfast tomorrow, even if you don't know it today, and only a very small chance of something else.
Unless you are a physicist who's rigged a machine to observe whether some radioactive isotope that has a roughly 50-50 chance of decaying, will actually decay, and then chooses his breakfast based on the result of the observation. But I would argue that most people are not hypothetical physicists trying to make a point, nor are most our choices by accident so on the fence that they'd be perturbed by quantum mechanical random events.

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