What if I told you that the theory of parallel worlds has
far more interpretations than you currently know? And that
such views have long been described in the earliest
religious texts. Moreover, the theory of parallel worlds
is actually a set of forgotten knowledge that modern physics
is only beginning to uncover the key to. This concept, which
once cost the Italian thinker Giordano Bruno his life, has
always attracted the attention of scientists and philosophers.
Vladimir Arshinov, Doctor of Philosophical Sciences and head
of the Interdisciplinary Problems of Scientific and Technical
Development Sector at the Institute of Philosophy of the
Russian Academy of Sciences, believed that parallel worlds
not only could exist but also vary in their manifestations.
According to Arshinov, the key to understanding alternative
existence was related to the concept of the "fifth dimension,"
which adds to the three spatial dimensions and the fourth
dimension - time. However, he clarified that modern world
models suggest the existence of many more dimensions - 11,
26, or even 267. These dimensions are not directly observable
but are present around us in a curled-up form. In a multi
- dimensional space, things that seem incredible in our
ordinary world become possible. Arshinov posited that other
worlds could represent different variants of reality, such
as a "mirror world," where truth and falsehood switch
places. Furthermore, he considered the possibility of
traveling between parallel worlds through a certain "mirror"
dimension (such as Kozirev's or Khlebnikov's mirrors; see
the note "How to Build a Time Machine: Final Report"),
which could theoretically allow movement through time and
space. However, the key question remained: is it possible
to "touch" or see these parallel worlds? Arshinov hypothesized
that if a reality with mirror-like dimensions exists, then
entering it could enable movement through space and time
with minimal effort. Returning to our world would be akin
to using a time machine. The existing laws of physics do not
exclude the possibility of connecting parallel worlds via
quantum tunneling, which could theoretically allow
transitions from one world to another without violating the
law of conservation of energy. Yet, such a transition would
require an enormous amount of energy. Or perhaps not?
Another possibility suggested that pathways to parallel
worlds could be hidden within "black holes," which might
actually be "wormholes" - pathways from one world to another.
Vladimir Surdin, Senior Researcher at the P. Sternberg
Astronomical Institute, and Dmitry Galtzov, Doctor of Physical
and Mathematical Sciences and Professor at Moscow State
University, argued that mathematics allows for the existence
of such "wormholes," although they have yet to be discovered.
The multiverse theory, although still a model at this stage,
offers an intriguing explanation for many mysterious
phenomena. If parallel worlds exist and are inhabited, this
sheds light on various paranormal phenomena I have written
about. However, as Alexander Bolonkin, another researcher
of parallel worlds, emphasized - who is a Doctor of Technical
Sciences and Professor - there is currently no scientific
proof of the existence of parallel worlds. Yuri Gnedin,
Deputy Director of the Main Astronomical Observatory of the
Russian Academy of Sciences, was, on the contrary, convinced
that the theory of the existence of parallel universes was
possible and based on scientific results. He noted that each
of these universes could be inhabited, but the problem lay
in the lack of means to communicate with them. Thus, the
idea of parallel worlds continues to captivate the minds
of scientists and philosophers, offering both new perspectives
for understanding the universe and new mysteries to be solved.
Source:
gopher://shibboleths.org/0/phlog/178.txt
--- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
* Origin: Shipwrecks & Shibboleths [San Francisco, CA - USA] (700:100/72)