Straight Sativa
Well-Known Member
Before I start, I want to say this: Please don't make posts belittling other's opinions. This thread is about getting ideas from tons of people and putting them together yourself into the most believable amalgamation of answers to questions we do not yet know.
And what better thoughts are there than those of philosophical herb tokers??
Now let's get this metaphysical train a rollin'!
I'll start..
After watching the movie Source Code last night and pondering the multiverse this morning, I got to thinking about the concept of infinity. Infinity means "extending forever in both directions," hence there are both positive and negative infinities. There is no beginning, and there is no end when it comes to infinity, which I believe we are dealing with in regards to inter-universal space.
In the movie Source Code, the main character played by Jake Gyllenhaal is part of a government program to exploit the multiverse by teleporting into a parellel universe in order to find the identity of a train-bombing terrorist. It is revealed in the end that everytime he "teleports," another parallel universe is created, thus spawning more and more universes.
This is the thinking behind the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics(from Farlex Encyclopedia):
So according to the theory, everytime a subatomic particle travels through space time it is actually creating an alternate universe and that the multiverse is "composed of a quantum superposition of very many, possibly even non-denumerably infinitely[9] many, increasingly divergent, non-communicating parallel universes or quantum worlds.[6]"
So if universes are infinate, then so must be time, I would presume.
And the same events would not necessarily occur in any of these universes, potentially making the possibilities of each universes' fate different.
Maybe a quantum physicist could weigh in on this
as much of it is far over my head. but for now I need to go enlighten myself some more

will post more later
I welcome all to share their thoughts! Much love
And what better thoughts are there than those of philosophical herb tokers??

Now let's get this metaphysical train a rollin'!
I'll start..
After watching the movie Source Code last night and pondering the multiverse this morning, I got to thinking about the concept of infinity. Infinity means "extending forever in both directions," hence there are both positive and negative infinities. There is no beginning, and there is no end when it comes to infinity, which I believe we are dealing with in regards to inter-universal space.
In the movie Source Code, the main character played by Jake Gyllenhaal is part of a government program to exploit the multiverse by teleporting into a parellel universe in order to find the identity of a train-bombing terrorist. It is revealed in the end that everytime he "teleports," another parallel universe is created, thus spawning more and more universes.
This is the thinking behind the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics(from Farlex Encyclopedia):
[many worlds interpretation] is an attempt to deal with the paradoxical situation that in quantum mechanics an object often seems to exist in two or more different states at the same time. For example, it may be impossible to define which of two slits an electron passes through. The many-world interpretation deals with this by saying that at every such quantum-mechanical event, the universe splits into two: in one universe the electron passes through one slit, in the other it passes through the other slit. This splitting of the universe occurs at every instant, as quantum-mechanical events occur in innumerable places, so that unimaginably huge numbers of branching universes exist.
So according to the theory, everytime a subatomic particle travels through space time it is actually creating an alternate universe and that the multiverse is "composed of a quantum superposition of very many, possibly even non-denumerably infinitely[9] many, increasingly divergent, non-communicating parallel universes or quantum worlds.[6]"
So if universes are infinate, then so must be time, I would presume.
And the same events would not necessarily occur in any of these universes, potentially making the possibilities of each universes' fate different.
Maybe a quantum physicist could weigh in on this




I welcome all to share their thoughts! Much love
