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originally posted by: norhoc
a reply to: Pearj
We can dance if we want to
We've got all your life and mine
OK, and contextually WE makes sense here when saying "all your life and mine" when talking about two people, which is what the whole song is talking about it ,would be WE not You. I seriously can't believe Mandela Effect is a thing people believe.
Lucy Plasencia • 5 months ago
quantum physics demonstrates that all possible realities exist and do so simultaneously. The feeling of time passing is an illusion and the more approximate illustration is that we are quantum shifting from still moment to still moment, giving the illusion of movement, when in reality there is no past or future, there is only now - and past, present, and futures are tied together by coherence of sub atomic particles that act more like strings. What ever all that means!
originally posted by: Perfectenemy
originally posted by: UnBreakable
a reply to: Pearj
I grew up in the '80s, was in my 20s, it always was "we". Sorry to put a damper on this.
How often do i have to repeat myself? We're all correct. There is no right or wrong when it comes to the ME.
originally posted by: norhoc
Look, people that believe in this interdimensional ME stuff are, to me, no different than religious people. I wish , more than anyone , that there was more to our existence than there is, but there is not and the sooner you accept that the better.
Quantum indeterminacy is the unavoidable fact that not all quantities can simultaneously have determinate values. For example, if an electron has a location, then it simply has no speed – it is neither at rest, nor is it moving slowly, nor is it moving quickly. There simply is no fact of the matter about its state of motion. Similarly, if an electron is in a definite state of motion, then it’s not in any particular place – not here, nor there, nor anywhere.
Let’s be completely clear about what we’re saying here. We are not just saying that if you know the position of the electron, then you don’t know whether or not it’s moving. We’re saying that if the electron has some position, then it does not have any state of motion. What could this possibly mean? Nobody is quite sure.
But the story gets more interesting. Whenever a conscious observer tries to determine the position of the electron, she will always finds that it does indeed have a position. Similarly, whenever a conscious observer tries to determine the state of motion of an electron, she will always find that it does indeed have some particular state of motion.
originally posted by: dragonridr
originally posted by: Finspiracy
originally posted by: consigliere
a reply to: Finspiracy
The fact you question your sanity means your just fine fin.
Thank you for encouragement. I also add that i like your signature.
Two things i would really like to know about Mandela effect:
1. What causes it?
2. Why it doesn't have influence on everyone?
But i am still thankful it is only minor details that change. Stuff in pop culture, maybe a line in song lyrics or something. It can be disturbing and it can haunt me in my head quite a bit if i think about it too much. But it is not like my mom is a completely different person or my social security number has suddenly changed.
Let's examine that a moment. OK if you believe in say parallel universes why is it say only one word changed?? We have two writers on two different worlds create a song but only change one word?? Does that even make sense since a parallel world to make the same song means that the writer had the same influences in both places.
Next if parallel world's exist which I believe they do but the distances involved would be mind boggling. How can someone transport billion's of light years without noticing.
And finally why does this never happen to a scientist were say a new experiment in physics occurred. Or a doctor to notice an anatomy change. Or a pilot as the controls change. Oddly it never effects things people know like there job.
Though the concept may stretch credulity, there's good physics behind it. And there's not just one way to get to a multiverse — numerous physics theories independently point to such a conclusion. In fact, some experts think the existence of hidden universes is more likely than not.
Space-time may stretch out to infinity. If so, then everything in our universe is bound to repeat at some point, creating a patchwork quilt of infinite universes.
Credit: Shutterstock/R.T.Wohlstadter
3. Parallel Universes
Another idea that arises from string theory is the notion of "braneworlds" — parallel universes that hover just out of reach of our own, proposed by Princeton University's Paul Steinhardt and Neil Turok of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Ontario, Canada. The idea comes from the possibility of many more dimensions to our world than the three of space and one of time that we know. In addition to our own three-dimensional "brane" of space, other three-dimensional branes may float in a higher-dimensional space.
The superpositions of different universes all coexist simultaneously in the same infinite-dimensional Hilbert space. These separate, coexisting universes interfere with each other, yielding the bizarre quantum behaviors.
originally posted by: fleabit
originally posted by: OccamsRazor04
originally posted by: fleabit Depend vs. Depends for example.
What's the controversy here?
For that one in particular? Many say they recall it as Depends, but it just Depend. But honestly aside from jokes about adult diapers, how often do people actually interact with the word? So that is almost certainly just a mistake, not an ME.
Dilemna (dillema) and Caldwell (Coldwell) however.. are very strange to me.
originally posted by: Pearj
a reply to: norhoc
The Mandela Effect doesn't affect only America - and doesn't affect only "mundane" things.
In fact it seems to only affects things that are very very popular.
Just sayin'.
originally posted by: Perfectenemy
a reply to: dragonridr
His eyes were described as brown in our german history books. They never ever mentioned blue eyes in any one of them.
originally posted by: Josephus
originally posted by: Pearj
a reply to: Josephus
Not all those that wander are lost.
What?
All that is gold does not glitter,
Not all those who wander are lost;
The old that is strong does not wither,
Deep roots are not reached by the frost.
From the ashes a fire shall be woken,
A light from the shadows shall spring;
Renewed shall be blade that was broken,
The crownless again shall be king.
originally posted by: subfab
a reply to: Pearj
i still would like to see a picture of an old reba macentyre album to see how she spelled her name.
or a picture of an old berenstein bears book to see how it was spelled.
originally posted by: LadyGreenEyes
originally posted by: subfab
a reply to: Pearj
i still would like to see a picture of an old reba macentyre album to see how she spelled her name.
or a picture of an old berenstein bears book to see how it was spelled.
Now this is annoying.....
Guess which one of my CDs I discovered is missing? Not even loaded into the computers (plural) anymore, either!!
originally posted by: subfab
originally posted by: LadyGreenEyes
originally posted by: subfab
a reply to: Pearj
i still would like to see a picture of an old reba macentyre album to see how she spelled her name.
or a picture of an old berenstein bears book to see how it was spelled.
Now this is annoying.....
Guess which one of my CDs I discovered is missing? Not even loaded into the computers (plural) anymore, either!!
seems as though mandela took your CDs along with everyone's memory.
:-)
originally posted by: wickd_waze
originally posted by: blackadder01
originally posted by: AdmireTheDistance
I miss the 80's.
The 80s were good weren't they, I miss that era too.
70's and 80's were the best times to be a kid. Everyone still played outside and technology was starting to come around like the arcade and portable music players. Computers were still for scientists and accountants.