So, the idea that everytime there is a quantum event, which is happening continuously everywhere in the universe, a new world is created for every possibility of that event, seems reasonable. — Rich
In response to previous assertions that the reality of multiple universe is 'craziness' is it any more crazy than any of the other interpretations?! — Mike Adams
Everett’s scientific journey began one night in 1954, he recounted two decades later, “after a slosh or two of sherry.” [Incidentally the story notes that Everett became an alcoholic, a fact which contributed to his early death.] He and his Princeton classmate Charles Misner and a visitor named Aage Petersen ....were thinking up “ridiculous things about the implications of quantum mechanics.” During this session Everett had the basic idea behind the many-worlds theory, and in the weeks that followed he began developing it into a dissertation.
The refusal to countenance this as a real possibility just demonstrates the problems human beings have with scale. — Mike Adams
But if you consider the sheer numbers of atoms in a small piece of coal, or the space between the nucleus of the atom and the electrons, of the size of the universe etc things outside our tiny scale seem far less ridiculous. — Mike Adams
I should really point out that I don't necessarily believe in determinism, I am just yet to hear an acceptable scientific explanation of how we can account for genuine agent control in an indetermistic universe. — Mike Adams
It's not scale that the problem, it is the inherent outlandishness of the implications of there really being many parallel universes. — Wayfarer
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