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For centuries, humanity has clung to the idea of a singular, linear reality—one in which time unfolds predictably, governed by cause and effect.
But quantum mechanics, the most successful yet baffling branch of modern physics, suggests a far stranger possibility: that reality is not fixed but fluid, and that an infinite number of parallel versions of ourselves may exist simultaneously.
By ArthurFor centuries, humanity has clung to the idea of a singular, linear reality—one in which time unfolds predictably, governed by cause and effect.
But quantum mechanics, the most successful yet baffling branch of modern physics, suggests a far stranger possibility: that reality is not fixed but fluid, and that an infinite number of parallel versions of ourselves may exist simultaneously.