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Alternate Histories & Timelines
Timelines and the AfterLife question
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<blockquote data-quote="Harte" data-source="post: 21701" data-attributes="member: 443"><p><strong>Re: Timelines and the AfterLife question</strong></p><p></p><p><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"thenumbersix\")</div></p><p> </p><p>Thenumbersix,</p><p> </p><p>You are absolutely right. "Collapsing the probability wave" is a term used by quantum physicists that don't buy into what's known as the "Many Universes" theory in QM. The many universe guys just recognize it as the moment an event crystallizes into our reality. Observation is the trigger to which you refer. I know that it sounds crazy but the observational trigger has been proven in laboratory experiments. The <strong><em>act of observation</em></strong> causes the reality to change and I don't mean interfering with the state of the observed object by bouncing photons off it or something like that. The only argument in this is the explanation for what is happening. The vast majority of physicists think of an event as potentially occuring subject to the laws of probability. Once the event has been observed the probability wave collapses and the event enters our reality. A few believe in the many universe theory that there is a different universe for each quantum probability. BTW, this is only true at the quantum level, no one knows anything about any other universes possibly created by our conscious choices in life. Look for info on the "Two slit experiment" for more on the observational trigger.</p><p> </p><p>Perhaps more on topic is another very strange idea from quantum physics. It turns out that an antiparticle can be seen as it's counterpart particle with an opposite time arrow. So an antielectron might be an electron moving backward through time. I think it was Feynman that said that there might be only one electron in the universe, it just goes back in time and fills in all it's spots over and over.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Harte, post: 21701, member: 443"] [b]Re: Timelines and the AfterLife question[/b] <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"thenumbersix\")</div> Thenumbersix, You are absolutely right. "Collapsing the probability wave" is a term used by quantum physicists that don't buy into what's known as the "Many Universes" theory in QM. The many universe guys just recognize it as the moment an event crystallizes into our reality. Observation is the trigger to which you refer. I know that it sounds crazy but the observational trigger has been proven in laboratory experiments. The [b][i]act of observation[/i][/b] causes the reality to change and I don't mean interfering with the state of the observed object by bouncing photons off it or something like that. The only argument in this is the explanation for what is happening. The vast majority of physicists think of an event as potentially occuring subject to the laws of probability. Once the event has been observed the probability wave collapses and the event enters our reality. A few believe in the many universe theory that there is a different universe for each quantum probability. BTW, this is only true at the quantum level, no one knows anything about any other universes possibly created by our conscious choices in life. Look for info on the "Two slit experiment" for more on the observational trigger. Perhaps more on topic is another very strange idea from quantum physics. It turns out that an antiparticle can be seen as it's counterpart particle with an opposite time arrow. So an antielectron might be an electron moving backward through time. I think it was Feynman that said that there might be only one electron in the universe, it just goes back in time and fills in all it's spots over and over. [/QUOTE]
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