there is a universe full to the brim with chickens, all that chicken space.
Science Memes
Welcome to c/science_memes @ Mander.xyz!
A place for majestic STEMLORD peacocking, as well as memes about the realities of working in a lab.
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It's funny, outside of Hollywood, Comic Books, and Bertrand Russel trying to disprove religion by taking Hawking out of context, is there any real evidence for a multiverse?
I mean I believe that reality is truly infinite and the only reason we have limitations is because we haven't found a way around them yet (Science distinguishable from magic is not sufficiently advanced in my book), so I'm not calling bullshit, but I'm also asking for evidence beyond going "Hey, wouldn't it be cool if?"
Quantum results are hard to explain, but proven (by experiment) to be real. There's a particular mathematical/logical definition of something being 'real' and 'local', that I've still only half got my head around, and it should be true but isn't.
The main experiment is two particles that, if you check one, it affects what you'll see in the other in a particular, but subtle , way. And it's proven mathematically impossible to find an explanation where they don't either communicate faster than the speed of light (so, not 'local') but the effect actually happens ('real').
The trick is in the statistics - the pattern of results - that match up between the two particles in this very particular way. And one way to explain it is that different options are also happening, but in a different universe - i.e. every time two different things could happen, reality splits into two realities, one where this happens and one where that happens.
That's for specific quantum events, but some think those such quantum events underlie all choices and possibilities in reality. So, scale up that idea and you get 'infinite' (actually just very very many) parallel universes, one for every possibility that could ever have happened, branching off into more each time a (quantum) choice happens.
They don't "communicate" faster than light, the wave function itself is non-local and collapses non-locally.
There is the Mandela effect if you want to believe that, but that is also easier to explain by people having shit memory.
Berenstein/berenstain bears are like the main Mandela effect thing(other than mandela)
Personally it was always "Berenstain Bears" I know it was because I watched the Nick Jr. show as a kid, and the ads would use the "BerenstAin" name
The Mandela Effect is interesting because while I do remember the correct version of most events (Pikachu did not have a black stripe, Rich Uncle Pennybags did not have a Moncole, Nelson Mandela did not die in prison, "No, I AM your father"), there are still some that I straight up know did not happen the way I remember them.
For example: Fruit of the Loom had a Cornucopia, I remember because it was the first time I had ever seen one. The only reason I knew what a cornucopia was, was due to it being on the underwear logo.
That said I have heard about memory being incredibly suggestible, studies about people who were tricked into believing they had been on a Hot Air Balloon when they had not or seeing Bugs Bunny at Disney World despite that not being a Disney character. So Mandela Effect could be bullshit.
There are some stories that interest me from time to time.
Like in a Youtube Video discussing Mandela Effect, James Rolfe better known as the Angry Video Game Nerd, had always remembered the pay off to "My face on the one dollar bill", being that the money Joker gives out at the end of Tim Burton's Batman movie was counterfeit with the Joker's face on it... But that's never actually revealed in the movie.
The reason that interests me, is that the prop money DID have Jack Nicholson's face on it, but it's something you can only find out by reading about the development of the movie as it's never shown to the camera clearly enough for you to tell. Making it interesting that James remembered a factual detail he couldn't possibly remember from watching the movie.
Now it's easy to say "Well James just read about the prop money being Joker themed and got mixed up about where he heard the money from"
My dad is even more interesting, for reasons beyond it being someone I know
My dad claims he is a magnet for this kind of phenomenon, claims that the "Time People" are always messing with him, and that he regularly experiences time out of order. The thing is though he might actually be right.
We've had times where we're talking and he says something that has nothing to do with what we're talking about and makes no sense at all, and I'm like "Are you okay?"
Like one time I was just checking in on him, and he starts rambling about Dr. Manhattan from Watchmen for some reason... I just assume he's tired, since he works two jobs and all., often coming home from one just to change uniforms and go to the other.
And then months later, we're talking about weird experiences we've had while high (He's a stoner, I'm not but I partake from time to time), and I mentioned that sometimes I "see things" before they happen, but I can't stop them from happening, then when they happen... It's like.. I know they're going to happen, but I can't prevent them happening, and I react like I'm "supposed to"
And he says the thing he said before about Dr. Manhattan, referencing the scene where he's on Mars and knows his lady friend is going to tell him something, she tells him, and he still acts surprised, because he was SUPPOSED to be surprised...
It's the same thing he said only now there's context for it, and then our heads start hurting and we flashback to the conversation where he had no reason to say it.
Freaky stuff happens to him.
The weirdest one though, is one time he straight up told me that he was from another universe.
See I don't live with my dad, he's a state a way and I only sometimes see him. Last time I saw him it was for my cousin's graduation, and he says to me, he's not my dad, he's a version of him from another universe.
Because he never married my stepmother, and I'm confused because he did and they have a daughter, my half-sister. He tells me a story of how years ago he screwed up on a big date way back when, and never got over her. So he went out drinking with some friends of his at this restaurant, and he sees her at the bar, he's had a few drinks and they tell him that he needs to win her back, do this one grand romantic gesture.
Now he's drunk this sounds like a good idea, and he goes up to her, but sees she's with a guy, having a nice time, and decides not to ruin her night. He tells me, that he goes home in tears, his heart broken, and falls asleep alone. The next day, he wakes up and she's in the kitchen, finds that he and her have been married for months, she loves him, and has no recollection of being anywhere last night except home with him. So he just smiles, and accepts that he has been given a gift, and just tells her that it was all a bad dream he had been having.
Creepy story if true. Not sure I believe it, but it's an interesting tale to say the least.
Now, it's possible that my Dad is just fucking with me because he thinks it's funny, but... believe what you want I guess. Maybe my Dad has some kind of undiagnosed schizophrenic disorder or maladaptive day dreaming. I don't know, and I probably never will.
I love multiverse theory! I also love how a lot of people don't really understand how finite infinites work in the context of multiverse theory!
There might be a universe in which magic exists. However, there is no universe in which I exist and magic exists. That's because I was born into a mundane version of the universe, so there are infinite possibilities, but because my existence in a magical universe is 0, being accepted into a witching school is something that'll never happen for me.
So no, within the context of multiverse theory there is no universe in which multiverse theory doesn't exist, because that is a paradox and as such, has 0 chance of existing. However, it totally possible that a magical universe does exist (I would say we don't know enough about the formation of the universe to accurately judge whether or not such a universe could be possible under the right formative circumstances); it's just that the chances of any of us existing in that universe is 0.
huh
isn't this just Russell's paradox
if I recall correctly Russell's Paradox was how ZFC set theory became the standard set theory
ZF handles it. The C adds the axiom of choice. But ZF is enough for dealing with the Russel paradox. Oddly enough, Zermelo, the Z in ZF, published the Russel paradox a year before Russel.
There's a parallel universe in which the fundamental laws of physics are different: the weight of an electron, the gravitational constant, how many fundamental particles there are, the cosmological constant, ...
And one where I have a goatee and I'm the evil version of myself, right??
You're getting into omniverse territory here, I think. But if accurate, then the dimensions without multiverses just lack the ability to perceive, observe, understand, measure, prove, or travel outside of their own universes. There's a whole multiverse of such isolated bubbles that will "know" that there's no multiverse, and we have a 50/50 chance of being in one.
That’s not how statistics works lol
If there are infinite universes, covering all permutations of all properties (i asume thats what they mean by omniverse), then there will be exactly as many universes with a certain property then there are without it. So it is actually 50/50.
In the "multiverse of all possibilities" there will be 50% without a multiverse