In troubling times, some people may wonder about the idea of multiverses–where other versions of us and our reality are playing out, but perhaps differently–and whether we’re in a particularly bad iteration. The real question, writes George Musser, author and contributing editor of
Scientific American, is not whether there are other so-called timelines: according to quantum physics, there almost certainly are. The real question is
why we experience only one reality (for better or worse).
On the nature of our reality: Human comprehension–and perhaps life itself–could not accommodate the knowledge of every possible outcome of existence, Musser speculates, especially considering their infinitudes.
What the experts say: One of the key insights of physicist Hugh Everett, originator of the multiverse-spawning "many worlds" interpretation of quantum mechanics, concerned the consequences of humans being part of the reality we hope to observe. Because we are embedded in the system, Everett argued, we can never observe other branches of reality firsthand. "Rather than holding open all possibilities, a mind must settle—at least tentatively—on one," writes Musser. "The effort required to make that choice—and, from there, to act upon it—may be key to giving us at least the subjective feeling of free will."
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