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Everett's Thesis

Everett's Thesis, often associated with the Many-Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics, suggests that all possible outcomes of a quantum event actually occur, each in its own separate "branch" or universe. Instead of randomness collapsing a wave function into one result, the universe continually splits into multiple, parallel realities, each representing different possibilities. This means every decision or chance event creates a new universe. The approach offers a deterministic view, removing the need for randomness or special rules at the quantum level, and implies that all potential outcomes are equally real, just happening in different branches of reality.