Thursday, July 18, 2013

A typical electron is an irreducibly multiversal object


"Thanks to the strong internal interference that it is continuously undergoing, a typical electron is an irreducibly multiversal object , and not a collection of parallel -universe or parallel -histories objects. That is to say , it has multiple positions and multiple speeds without being divisible into autonomous sub-entities each of which has one speed and one position . Even different electrons do not have completely separate identities. So the reality is an electron field through out the whole of space, and disturbances spread through this field as waves, at the speed of light or below. This is what gave rise to the often quoted misconception among the pioneers of quantum theory that electrons (and likewise all other particles) are ‘ particles and waves at the same time’ . There is a field (or ‘ waves’ ) in the multiverse for every individual particle that we observe in a particular universe."

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