Ever wonder how those Transformers hit it big enough to spawn
an infinite number of action figures and a blockbuster movie franchise?
This has to be the best example of the Many Worlds hypothesis by Hugh Everett, a theory that postulates that an infinite number of parallel universes exist thanks to quantum mechanics, with infinite versions of you doing
infinite number of actions with infinite number of outcomes.
Not exact matches
«Each period, whether a day, a month, a year or longer, represents an
infinite number of possible learning opportunities, revealing more and more about correlations, hedging, law, regulation, culture, sizing positions, trading versus holding, activism, bankruptcy law and practice, government
action and political impacts on investing, organizational realities and growth, as well as the kind
of personal characteristics that are required to do this job well.»
Though there are large, governing rules
of the universe which tend to guide all
actions and behaviors (such as the laws
of gravity and entropy), the nearly
infinite number of other variables can often lead to unforeseen outcomes and unexpected results.
Non existent and unspoken laws — that Wenger, Gazidis and Kroenke must have broken an
infinite number of times with their lies and
actions.