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  1. Multiverse

    The multiverse is the hypothetical set of all universes. Together, these universes are presumed to comprise everything that exists: the entirety of space, time, matter, energy, information, and the physical laws and constants that describe them. The different universes within the multiverse are called "parallel universes", "flat universes", "other universes", "alternate universes", "multiple universes", "plane universes", "parent and child universes", "many universes", or "many worlds". One common assumption is that the multiverse is a "patchwork quilt of separate universes all bound by the same laws of physics." The concept of multiple universes, or a multiverse, has been discussed throughout history, including Greek philosophy. It has evolved and has been debated in various fields, including cosmology, physics, and philosophy. Some physicists argue that the multiverse is a philosophical notion rather than a scientific hypothesis, as it cannot be empirically falsified. Wikipedia

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  2. moretothat.com

    This is the Many Worlds of Enough. It's the perpetual branching of identity that results from progress, as progress provides you with the confidence and ability to actualize greater things (resulting in further progress). The cyclical nature of this process is what makes it so difficult to stop, and is what prevents us from ever settling on ...
  3. moretothat.com

    The Many Worlds of Enough. Enough is elusive because when you reach it, you're no longer the person that once desired it. If you want to delve deeper, you can explore my best work by category, or browse the full archive: Reality is far more nuanced than it seems, and I'm excited to explore it further with you. This journey is a perpetual work ...
  4. en.wikipedia.org

    Schrödinger's cat in the many-worlds interpretation, where a branching of the universe occurs through a superposition of two quantum mechanical states. ... and when they collide, the violence and energy produced is more than enough to give rise to a Big Bang. The branes float or drift near each other in the bulk, and every few trillion years ...
  5. quoteinvestigator.com

    As Rebecca West said, one of the damn things is enough. The artist does more than express capricious feelings; he is really telling us more about the world; he is giving an immediate apprehension of a richer and fuller experience. In 1943 the "Dictionary of World Literature" included an instance within the entry about the topic "Beauty".
  6. Many Worlds has nothing to do with choices or consciousness or willpower or anything human. In order to get normal, classical mechanics out of quantum mechanics, you need something called wavefunction collapse - in effect, a particle whose state was uncertain has (some part of) its state become certain upon measurement, with the result of the measurement reflecting that certain state. This is ...
  7. anthropic-principle.com

    Any system complex enough to be described by thermodynamics and exhibit irreversible behaviour is a system complex enough to exclude, for all practical purposes, any possibility of future ... Many-worlds is a re-formulation of quantum theory [1], published in 1957 by Dr Hugh Everett III [2], which treats the process of observation or ...
  8. plato.stanford.edu

    The Many-Worlds Interpretation (MWI) of quantum mechanics holds that there are many worlds which exist in parallel at the same space and time as our own. ... See Wallace 2002, 2010a, 2012 for more arguments why a FAPP definition of a world is enough. 3.5 Preferred Basis. The mathematical structure of the theory (i) allows infinitely many ways ...
  9. plato.stanford.edu

    1. Introduction. The fundamental idea of the MWI, going back to Everett 1957, is that there are myriads of worlds in the Universe in addition to the world we are aware of.In particular, every time a quantum experiment with different outcomes with non-zero probability is performed, all outcomes are obtained, each in a different world, even if we are aware only of the world with the outcome we ...
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