Posts Tagged ‘many worlds interpretation

20
Nov
08

Quantum Entanglement, The many-worlds interpretation, and Déjà vu

Entanglement has been shown to be a correlation between two particles. This correlation is such that, even with an infinite amount of space and/or time separating the particles, physically manipulating one particle will result in a reaction in the correlating particle. Now sit and think about this: even with an infinite amount of space separating the two particles, they are linked so much that physically manipulating one will result in a reaction by the other. Amazing.

The many worlds interpretation postulates that there are an infinite number of universes in which everything that can happen did happen. For every choice you make there is a universe for each possible outcome. Now sit and think of how many choices you have in a day, or even an hour. It’s almost infinite.

Think of all the choices you have made. How many of those choices would result in an extremely different life than you’re currently living?

  • Would the clothes you picked out make that big of a difference?
  • What about what you had for breakfast?
  • Or maybe which way you took to work this morning?

Chances are any of those things could have changed and you would still be sitting here reading this. So would it be that difficult to imagine out of all those realities, that more than a couple of them would be remarkably similar? It’s been said that people only use about 10% of their brain capacity. What if that’s because only 10% of the particles of your brain are in a universe that is close enough to this one that they can work as one functioning brain? It is my theory that every particle in the human body is entangled with an infinite number of particles in an infinite number of parallel universes. So in essence, our bodies and minds exist not as separate entities in these parallel universes but as one being spread out across the multi-verse.

Now most of us have experienced déjà vu at some point. I theorize that déjà vu is not some feeling that you have experienced something before, but rather you are experiencing the same thing, at the same time, in different universes. Think on it for a minute. Most of the times you have experienced déjà vu, has it been before or after something has happened? After, right? That’s because you can’t recall doing something until after it’s happened. I have never had an experience where I walk into a room and think, “Man, I’m about to have déjà vu.” It has always been, “Whoa! What just happened?”





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