Terms:
"cosmos": What most people incorrectly refer to as the "universe" - it
consists of what individuals in any given reality can possibly view from
within that reality. Plural is "cosmi".
"state": The given condition of an entity or group of entities at a given
time. I specify this here because the way I use the word is the way a lot
of people use the concept "timeline". I don't consider diverging parallel
cosmi to be on separate "timelines", just in separate spaces.
"entity": Any given set of matter or matter/energy dualities, ranging from
a single dimensionless point on up to the entire universe.
"multiverse": What should more properly be called the "universe" -
contains every single thing that exists and nothing thta does not exist.
There, terms defined. Now before I get to the wormhole part, let me ask a
sort of "background question" first:
Suppose you have two entities, perfectly identical in every single way in
states both external and internal. Do you actually have _two_ entities, or
are they in some strange quantum way the exact same object until something
occurs to make one different from the other?
The visualization I'm seeing to describe what I'm trying to get at has to
do with speculations on the "multi-verse". I see one "cosmos" (What most
people incorrectly refer to as a "universe" - for plural, I use "cosmi")
splitting into two parallel realities. But not all entities/objects within
each diverging timeline are differentiated immediately. At those locations
where an object is exactly identical to the same object in the emerging
timeline, the two parallel cosmi are still technically "attached" to one
another. Something like when you blow bubbles and two come out joined
together and then split apart. For a moment, they share a single, united
side, and the side resists being split into two. That kind of tenuous
"connectedness" is what I visualize when I think about one cosmos splitting
into divergent states.
Okay, there's that. Now, about that wormhole. We all know that every
object within our cosmos interacts via gravity with every other object
instantaneously. The forces from the surrounding cosmos to which any two
given objects are being subjected vary, even if only by a nearly
infinitecimal degree. They are not the same.
So... Suppose you could change that. Suppose you could form two perfectly
identical objects - same elements in exactly the same arrangement - and
alter the energy one of them is being subjected to (including gravity) so
that it exactly matches the energy effects the other object is experiencing
in every way - coming from the same angles to the same degrees and
everything. That would probably take an enormous amount of energy.
Furthermore, the further apart in space the two objects are, the more
energy it would take because the greater the differences would be in the
energetic effects each are experiencing from the surrounding cosmos.
But... suppose. Suppose it could be done. Would you have in effect
"linked" the two objects in some strange, quantum way so that they have in
effect fused two areas of space into one?
Just curious.
--
L8r,
Uncle Dollar Bill
You can't disguise hatred just by calling it love.
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