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The mathematics of Many Discrete Worlds

First published 1 June 2026

In this website I have argued that the results of quantum measurements may be interpreted similarly to Everett’s Many Worlds Interpretation, but that >>

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The local speed limit of the universe

First published 2 June 2026

In Step 4.4 (Beyond the cosmological particle horizon) I showed that events beyond our cosmological particle horizon may nevertheless be considered as part of our universe. I needed to show this because the argument in Step 4.3 (The multiverse and all of its universes are finite) depended on that supposition. However, I didn’t elaborate on the cosmological particle horizon in that Step because >>

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The expanding universe

First published 4 June 2026

In Step 2.1 (The block universe) we saw that light paths are always on light cones which are the same for all observers, even if they are moving with respect to the light cone. In the previous post, we saw that the local speed limit of the universe is the speed at which light travels. Now I’m going to throw a spanner in the works >>

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The cosmological particle horizon

First published 5 June 2026

Looking at the second figure in the post The expanding universe, you might easily conclude that we shall never see, here on Earth, the galaxy at the right of the diagram, beyond the Hubble sphere. Surprisingly, however >>