In some alternate reality no one talks about All at once everywhere. The incredible sci-fi story created by the Daniels Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert ended the jackpot season yesterday: Oscar for Best Picture, one of seven statuettes he received last night. And while we could spend weeks celebrating the film’s benefits—because there are many—we can’t stop thinking about just one thing here: Can the multiverse proposed by the tape exist in reality?

If you haven’t seen it yet, here we leave you with not one, but two reviews that we did. But in general, the central plot of the film is built around the idea of ​​the existence of multiple universes. He claims that in these other realities, there are alternate versions of ourselves: stronger, more humiliating, or even controversial. That’s why it’s so exciting. Yes, this may sound like Marvel to you.

We don’t want to drive you crazy. In fact, we warn you that Hugh Everett III, an American physicist who first proposed the theory of parallel universes, was ridiculed by his colleagues at the time, left physics amazed by the complexity of his postulates, and died an early death. Heart attack in 1982. So take it easy.

YouTube video

Trailer of the film “All at once everywhere.”

What multiverse are they talking about? All at once everywhere?

Yes, the existence of the multiverse has not been proven, but the idea itself continues to keep many people awake at night. It is a concept with many theories that at times dances between the scientific and the philosophical. Physicists George Ellis and Joe Silk described the multiverse debate in an article published in Nature in 2014 as “The Battle for the Heart and Soul of Physics”.

One of the simplest explanations of the multiverse that we see in All at once everywhere It’s related to the theory “space inflation”. Let’s move on to the beginner’s multiverse mode, because that’s how we asked them to explain it to us.

Does he ring the bell? big Bang? When the universe grew exponentially in less than the blink of an eye after the Big Bang, some parts of space-time expanded faster than others. This could create bubbles of sorts to house their own universes. These other “bubbles” would be parallel to our universe, in which completely different physical laws could operate. Kind of like the scene in the movie where everyone had sausage hands.

Evelyn, main character “All at once everywhere”.

A lot of? This explanation could be simpler: “multi-world interpretation” quantum mechanics. It’s related to what you explained Everett III – someone who has a heart attack. In the world of quantum reality, everything is described by probabilities.

According to this version of the multiverse, any event can have more than one outcome, either because we make some kind of decision, or because some random event occurs that changes everything. Each decision creates an alternate timeline in which we choose something different. Something like what we think when we ask ourselves: what would happen if…? Except that, essentially, this other thing would happen in a parallel universe. For example, when Evelyn, the main character All at once everywhere, the universe jumps and can see the world in which she decided not to get married. And he saw that it was a happier world.

Can we jump between universes?

directors All at once everywhere said in an interview with The newspaper “New York Times which were inspired by what we have just explained: both the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics and the idea of ​​cosmic bubble universes.

Now: how about being able to jump between these realities like in the movie? There is still no theory on how to travel between different parallel universes. The closest that has been written has to do with the idea that these “bubble universes” collide with each other, leaving a kind of “scar” that may give us some clue to the existence of other realities.

One of the craziest scenes All at once everywhere.

The Daniels explained that their film is not so much about physics as it is about how physics makes you feel. “If you could see alternative lives, it would send you into a spiral with all the lives you could have and the choices you could have made,” Scheinert said. New York Times.

They explained that their multiverse is not so much a science as a metaphor. “I grew up in a very religious family, so everything mattered… And when it all matters, navigating the world is a terrible experience.”said, for his part, Kwan, another creative. It’s paralyzing: “Everything, every action is full of regret, and every action is full of guilt.”

Perhaps, among so many reflections on bubble universes, on the randomness or insignificance of our existence, we can come to an understanding of what is really “nothing matters”. And, if nothing matters, everything is possible.

Source: Hiper Textual

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