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单词 multiverse
释义

Definition of multiverse in English:

multiverse

noun ˈmʌltɪvəːsˈməltēˌvərs
  • 1A hypothetical space or realm consisting of a number of universes, of which our own universe is only one.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Reality is a multiverse rather than a simple universe.
    • A similar genre also had a smaller rise and fall during that time: the idea that our universe is but one of many in a multiverse, in which alternate universes are identical to ours up to a certain point but then diverge.
    • There are infinite possible versions of each world in the multiverse, and many of these have different states of human life and technology on them.
    • If we do live in a multiverse, it should surprise no one that we find ourselves in a particular universe that enables us to exist - one in which the laws of nature provide world enough and time for intelligent life to evolve.
    • It could be the old chestnut that we live in a multiverse of infinite possibility, where every sliding door decision is a decision that was made both ways.
    • There are other multiverses with other worlds, but we have access to only this one.
    • We agree on several important things, among them that fundamental physics likely gives us a landscape of possible theories, while cosmology may give a multiverse containing a vast number of regions like our own universe.
    • We live in a multiverse, not a universe, and there are 120-something versions of every person.
    • Do different parts of the universe expand by different amounts, such that our universe is a single inflationary bubble of a much larger multiverse?
    • I tend towards thinking that there is a multiverse of worlds, but that it is merely my consciousness, awareness, and likely biological factors, which prevents me from existing in too many of these worlds.
    • He treats the multiverse as if it were a quantum computer.
    • The very theory of quantum computers already forces upon us a view of physical reality as a multiverse.
    • There are also scientific works showing that there is a real possibility that our universe is just a small part of a huge multiverse, one of a great many different universes.
    • To be sure, a few philosophers have touted the putative merits of multiverses.
    • But what if the universe was always there, in a state or condition we have yet to identify - a multiverse, for instance?
    • So, he continues, taking the multiverse theory at face value means ‘there is no reason to expect our world - the one in which you are reading this right now - to be real as opposed to a simulation.’
    • For instance theorists who argue for a ‘Multiverse’ cosmos are always vague on how many multiverses there are potentially and on the process by which any particular multiverse comes into being.
    • That would explain a lot of the nonlocal quatum effects, and allows for the multiverse, hidden variable, and the state vector collapse.
    • At the heart of postmodernism is pluralism: a belief in multiverses and multiplicity, implying that there are as many ways to understand and experience the world as there are people who experience it.
    1. 1.1 The universe considered as lacking order or a single ruling and guiding power.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I conclude that the multiverse is ontologically equivalent to naïve deism.
      • In reply, a theist can appeal to the ultimate contingency that surfaces in the questions, ‘Why is there a multiverse?’
      • The multiverse contains an infinite number of recombinations.
      • If you adopt the idea of the multiverse, the anthropic principle may seem to furnish one of the oddest proofs for the existence of God yet promoted by human minds.
 
 

Definition of multiverse in US English:

multiverse

nounˈməltēˌvərs
  • An infinite realm of being or potential being of which the universe is regarded as a part or instance.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It could be the old chestnut that we live in a multiverse of infinite possibility, where every sliding door decision is a decision that was made both ways.
    • If we do live in a multiverse, it should surprise no one that we find ourselves in a particular universe that enables us to exist - one in which the laws of nature provide world enough and time for intelligent life to evolve.
    • Reality is a multiverse rather than a simple universe.
    • I tend towards thinking that there is a multiverse of worlds, but that it is merely my consciousness, awareness, and likely biological factors, which prevents me from existing in too many of these worlds.
    • At the heart of postmodernism is pluralism: a belief in multiverses and multiplicity, implying that there are as many ways to understand and experience the world as there are people who experience it.
    • There are infinite possible versions of each world in the multiverse, and many of these have different states of human life and technology on them.
    • A similar genre also had a smaller rise and fall during that time: the idea that our universe is but one of many in a multiverse, in which alternate universes are identical to ours up to a certain point but then diverge.
    • The very theory of quantum computers already forces upon us a view of physical reality as a multiverse.
    • So, he continues, taking the multiverse theory at face value means ‘there is no reason to expect our world - the one in which you are reading this right now - to be real as opposed to a simulation.’
    • There are other multiverses with other worlds, but we have access to only this one.
    • But what if the universe was always there, in a state or condition we have yet to identify - a multiverse, for instance?
    • We live in a multiverse, not a universe, and there are 120-something versions of every person.
    • For instance theorists who argue for a ‘Multiverse’ cosmos are always vague on how many multiverses there are potentially and on the process by which any particular multiverse comes into being.
    • There are also scientific works showing that there is a real possibility that our universe is just a small part of a huge multiverse, one of a great many different universes.
    • That would explain a lot of the nonlocal quatum effects, and allows for the multiverse, hidden variable, and the state vector collapse.
    • He treats the multiverse as if it were a quantum computer.
    • We agree on several important things, among them that fundamental physics likely gives us a landscape of possible theories, while cosmology may give a multiverse containing a vast number of regions like our own universe.
    • Do different parts of the universe expand by different amounts, such that our universe is a single inflationary bubble of a much larger multiverse?
    • To be sure, a few philosophers have touted the putative merits of multiverses.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/11 8:07:05