Can Parallel Universes Explain The Déjà Vu Phenomenon?

Opmmur

Time Travel Professor
Messages
5,049
Have you ever had a déjà vu experience? It's the feeling, or impression that you have already witnessed or experienced a current situation.

The term déjà vu is French and means, literally, "already seen."

It is a rather common, yet little understood phenomenon. Most of us have experienced being in a new place and feeling certain that we have been there before, but we have difficulties understanding how it is possible.

For a long time, this eerie sensation has been attributed to everything from paranormal disturbances to neurological disorders.

In recent years, as more scientists began studying this phenomenon, a number of theories about déjà vu have emerged, suggesting that it is not merely a glitch in our brain's memory system.

Psychologists have suggested that déjà vu may occur when specific aspects of a current situation resemble certain aspects of previously occurring situations.

If there is a lot of overlap between the elements of the new and old situations, we get a strong feeling of familiarity.

Alternative explanations associate déjà vu with prophecy, past life memories, clairvoyance, or a mystic signpost indicating fulfillment of a predetermined condition on the journey of life.

Whatever the explanation, déjà vu is certainly a phenomenon that is universal to the human condition, and its fundamental cause is still a mystery.


dejavuparauni.jpg

Is a copy of yourself living in a parallel universe the reason why you experience déjà vu?

Another intriguing possibility is that there is a hidden connection between déjà vu and the existence of parallel universes.

As some already know, the multiverse is a theory in which our universe is not the only one, but states that many universes exist parallel to each other. These distinct universes within the multiverse theory are called parallel universes.

According to Dr. Kaku, quantum physics states that there is the possibility that déjà vu might be caused by your ability to "flip between different universes".

Dr. Michio Kaku explains one theory behind déjà vu and asks, "Is it ever possible on any scale to perhaps flip between different universes?"


Parallel Worlds: A Journey
Through Creation, Higher
Dimensions, and the Future
of the Cosmos by Michio Kaku

Dr. Kaku mentions, Professor Steve Weinberg, the famous theoretical physicist and Nobel Prize winner, supports the idea of a multiverse. Weinberg says that there are an infinite number of parallel realities coexisting with us in the same room.

"There are hundreds of different radio waves being broadcast all around you from distant stations. At any given instant, your office or car or living room is full of these radio waves. However if you turn on a radio, you can listen to only one frequency at a time; these other frequencies are not in phase with each other.

Each station has a different frequency, a different energy. As a result, your radio can only be turned to one broadcast at a time.
Likewise, in our universe we are tuned into the frequency that corresponds to physical reality.

But there are an infinite number of parallel realities coexisting with us in the same room, although we cannot tune into them."

While your radio is tuned to pick up a certain frequency and thus a single radio station, our universe consists of atoms that are oscillating at a unique frequency that other universes are not vibrating at.

Universes are usually not "in phase", that is vibrating at the same frequency, with each other due to the divisions caused by time, but when they are "in phase" it is theoretically possible to "move back and forth" between universes.

So although it is "uncertain", it could be possible that when you are experiencing déjà vu, you are "vibrating in unison" with a parallel universe, explains Dr. Kaku

Perhaps our déjà vu experiences are a window into a parallel universe.
 

Samstwitch

Senior Member
Messages
5,111
When I was much younger, I had many dejavu experiences, but I have not had any for many years. I wondered if my dejavus were caused from having precognitive dreams about those events (as I often had precognitive dreams). I like the concepts listed above as well. :)
 

Ren

Senior Member
Messages
1,088
Sometimes when you experience an event of something you experienced before and smell a very strong smell, it will trigger a sense of Deja Vu. An example would be to take a walk viewing the autumn leaves in 2011 and taking that same walk in 2012. The idea is that if the weather is similar and you smell rotting leaves, that it will evoke a strong memory of that past event. It is only brief. But it might be the same feeling you get during the entire time you are traveling backwards in time. The sensation of light on your pineal gland, the strong sensation of smell. It is overwhelming and intoxicating.
 

Opmmur

Time Travel Professor
Messages
5,049
Sometimes when you experience an event of something you experienced before and smell a very strong smell, it will trigger a sense of Deja Vu. An example would be to take a walk viewing the autumn leaves in 2011 and taking that same walk in 2012. The idea is that if the weather is similar and you smell rotting leaves, that it will evoke a strong memory of that past event. It is only brief. But it might be the same feeling you get during the entire time you are traveling backwards in time. The sensation of light on your pineal gland, the strong sensation of smell. It is overwhelming and intoxicating.


Ren I like your comments, I can relate to it.
 

Samstwitch

Senior Member
Messages
5,111
Sometimes when you experience an event of something you experienced before and smell a very strong smell, it will trigger a sense of Deja Vu. An example would be to take a walk viewing the autumn leaves in 2011 and taking that same walk in 2012. The idea is that if the weather is similar and you smell rotting leaves, that it will evoke a strong memory of that past event. It is only brief. But it might be the same feeling you get during the entire time you are traveling backwards in time. The sensation of light on your pineal gland, the strong sensation of smell. It is overwhelming and intoxicating.


This actually happened to me once, and it made such an impression that I still remember it. I was about 11-years-old and I watched a movie downtown (Santa Ana) at the Broadway Theater. Afterwards, I walked out into the Lobby and I was left with a particular feeling from the movie. I believe the movie was Lawrence of Arabia with Peter O'Toole. (It was an awesome movie to see at that time.) Months later I was at the theater again and watched another great movie (I think it was Lord Jim) that left me with the same exact feeling when I walked out into the Lobby, and I had the overwhelming sense of Dejavu.

This is what I thought about when I read your comment. :)
 

Ren

Senior Member
Messages
1,088
I saw Lawrence of Arabia many times. I haven't seen Lord Jim. Always looking for a good movie recommendation, Sam. Thanks.
 

Samstwitch

Senior Member
Messages
5,111
I saw Lawrence of Arabia many times. I haven't seen Lord Jim. Always looking for a good movie recommendation, Sam. Thanks.

You're welcome. :) Peter O'Toole also starred in Lord Jim...back in the days when he was young and handsome. Another good movie to watch from that era is How to Steal a Million where O'Toole starred with Audrey Hepburn.
 

TimeNot_0

Member
Messages
241
Well, I guess that is what Hollywood thought when they made this movie: Deja Vu


which I already seen since I own the movie and bought it.
 

Ren

Senior Member
Messages
1,088
Well, I guess that is what Hollywood thought when they made this movie: Deja Vu


which I already seen since I own the movie and bought it.

I saw this when a member of the Institute forum recommended it. It was about the same time the director jumped off a bridge in front of a tour boat. The time travel story really does make sense toward the end.
 

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