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Multiverse

The multiverse is the hypothetical set of multiple universes that together comprise all that exists: space, time, matter, energy, and the laws and constants that describe them. The term is used in physics and philosophy to refer to realities beyond the observable universe.

A widely cited framework is Max Tegmark's four levels. Level I includes regions beyond the cosmic horizon

In physics, several mechanisms motivate a multiverse. Eternal inflation naturally produces Level II bubble universes. The

Observationally, there is no direct evidence for other universes, and the scientific status of multiverse hypotheses

See also: cosmic inflation, quantum mechanics, string theory, fine-tuning.

that
share
the
same
physical
laws
but
differ
in
initial
conditions.
Level
II
envisions
other
post-inflation
bubble
universes
with
possibly
different
physical
constants
or
laws.
Level
III
corresponds
to
the
many-worlds
interpretation
of
quantum
mechanics,
where
every
quantum
event
yields
branching,
non-communicating
worlds.
Level
IV
posits
that
all
mathematical
structures
correspond
to
real
universes.
Philosophical
modal
realism
is
a
related
position
that
treats
all
possible
worlds
as
real.
string
theory
landscape
suggests
a
vast
number
of
metastable
vacua
with
different
constants.
The
Many-Worlds
interpretation
of
quantum
mechanics
provides
a
branching
structure
of
histories.
Proponents
argue
that
a
multiverse
could
explain
fine-tuning
and
the
apparent
arbitrariness
of
physical
constants,
while
critics
contend
that
the
idea
risks
falsifiability.
is
debated.
Critics
emphasize
the
difficulty
of
empirical
tests,
while
supporters
seek
indirect
signatures
or
explanatory
power
from
probability
and
statistics
in
a
broader
framework.