Question:

I read Somwhere that.....?

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there is a multiverse. And all the other universes are in the same spot but just vibrating at different frequencies. What do you think? And if thats the case, can it be the same with time, can everything be happening all at once, but just vibrating on a different plane of existence?

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  1. um, do you belong in an insane asylum somewhere? We all know that there is no such thing as a 'universe'.


  2. I agree on the whole with comments from both Cid and Arcanum Noctis.

    Here is a link to what Wikipedia has on the word multiverse.

    I asked a similar question about a day ago, worded differently and I rehash it here for you to ponder coz I think my question answers your question.

    Could we be living this particular life over and over again, following the path we didn't take the first time?

    Every moment is a spindle in present time with sheets of our life's pages one on top of the other. We only have to pick which scenario we want to experience for it to happen. If you understand this concept, are you content knowing that you have gotten to where you are in life so far because it is the best possible pathway in your journey of BEING and BEcoming? Ponder it. Can you accept that?  Or do we live life as the same person and experience a myriad of paths all taking us in different directions, but also in different instant-es in the same 'body'.. but taking this further, could we also be every other person or creature in all these simultaneous nows, making us all one and the same 'soul' in a multidimensional existence... are we then just easily described as GOD? And that you are me and me you?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiverse

  3. i think that i heard there are diffrent levels. we could live in one level in the year 2008 while someone else is living in another level in the year 3099 as a monkey!

  4. It's an idea, but it doesn't have anything to back it up so far.  We can't observe anything outside our universe, and we don't have some universal 'fundamental frequency'.  One of the ideas of string theory is that all the particles are strings vibrating at different frequencies that determine their mass and charge, but string theory hasn't been tested yet (it will be, using the LHC and LISA), and that's a bunch of different frequencies anyway.

    Time is another dimension, like up and down or right and left.

  5. Imagine, for a moment, that one night you awaken abruptly from a dream. Coming to consciousness, blinking your eyes against the blackness, you find that, inexplicably, you are standing alone in a vast, pitch-black cavern. Befuddled by this predicament, you wonder: Where am I? What is this space? What are its dimensions?

    Groping in the darkness, you stumble upon a book of damp matches. You strike one; it quickly flares, then fizzles out. Again, you try; again, a flash and fizzle. But in that moment, you realize that you can glimpse a bit of your surroundings. The next match strike lets you sense faint walls far away. Another flare reveals a strange shadow, suggesting the presence of a big object. Yet another suggests you are moving—or, instead, the room is moving relative to you. With each momentary flare, a bit more is learned.

    In some sense, this situation recalls our puzzling predicament on Earth. Today, as we have done for centuries, we gaze into the night sky from our planetary platform and wonder where we are in this cavernous cosmos. Flecks of light provide some clues about great objects in space. And what we do discern about their motions and apparent shadows tells us that there is much more that we cannot yet see.

    From every photon we collect from the universe's farthest reaches, we struggle to extract information. Astronomy is the study of light that reaches Earth from the heavens. Our task is not only to collect as much light as possible—from ground and space-based telescopes—but also to use what we can see in the heavens to understand better what we cannot see and yet know must be there.

    Based on 50 years of accumulated observations of the motions of galaxies and the expansion of the universe, most astronomers believe that as much as 90 percent of the stuff constituting the universe may be objects or particles that cannot be seen. In other words, most of the universe's matter does not radiate—it provides no glow that we can detect in the electromagnetic spectrum. First posited some 60 years ago by astronomer Fritz Zwicky, this so-called missing matter was believed to reside within clusters of galaxies. Nowadays we prefer to call the missing mass "dark matter," for it is the light, not the matter, that is missing.

    Astronomers and physicists offer a variety of explanations for this dark matter. On the one hand, it could merely be ordinary material, such as ultrafaint stars, large or small black holes, cold gas, or dust scattered around the universe—all of which emit or reflect too little radiation for our instruments to detect. It could even be a category of dark objects called MACHOs (MAssive Compact Halo Objects) that lurk invisibly in the halos surrounding galaxies and galactic clusters. On the other hand, dark matter could consist of exotic, unfamiliar particles that we have not figured out how to observe. Physicists theorize about the existence of these particles, although experiments have not yet confirmed their presence. A third possibility is that our understanding of gravity needs a major revision—but most physicists do not consider that option seriously.

    In some sense, our ignorance about dark matter's properties has become inextricably tangled up with other outstanding issues in cosmology—such as how much mass the universe contains, how galaxies formed and whether or not the universe will expand forever. So important is this dark matter to our understanding of the size, shape and ultimate fate of the universe that the search for it will very likely dominate astronomy for the next few decades.

    Don't believe Astronomers or those say they are scientists. They are more confused than the rest of us.

    Believe in God who says He created as a unique being for a wonderful fellowship with Him and your fellow man.

  6. Everything that exists in the Universe or universes can only exist in the Now.  There is no other time, as there really is no such thing as time.  Time is an illusion the mind creates when it organizes events.

  7. The idea of multiverses is still in the infancy of speculative theoretics.

  8. It is there in some theories and in some theories it one universe and all the other univ ersesd are in the same verses are on the same spot. So till to day evry thig right till scientific proof.

  9. Well, then the way we think of time would be completely different. In this sense, time would be non-existent. Basically, everything happens all at once, its just that we are constantly crossing infinite variations of our universe.

    Its plausible and I like. This could actually explain everything about the paranormal.

  10. was it his dark materials trilogy?

  11. I love questions like this, I don't think my mind will let me sleep tonight now ... you rock ^^

    I'm going to run and grab a book i have on the subject somewhere downstairs, then I'll tell you what I read

    I didn't find the book I was looking for, but I found this :

    "There is no future. There is no past. Do you see? Time is simultaneous, an intricately structured jewel that humans insist on viewing one edge at a time, when the whole design is visible in every facet. What is your earliest memory? It isn't gone. It's still here. You have only to figure out how to let yourself see it."

    So ... right now I am sitting at my computer, answering your question. Yet right now, 1987, I am sleeping in a crib in my parent's room. It is 1994, right at this very moment, I am taking the train with my father.

    If this were true, that is. It would be very interesting ... if you could find a way to make yourself see the whole diamond, you could see the 'future' (the present).

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