Do you know the feeling of deja vu? Parallel Worlds By MICHIO KAKU.
Does this article seem familiar? Have you already seen it before? Deja vu?
In this video, Dr. Mijo Kaku, a theoretical physicist and best-selling author, reveals the possible causes of the deja vu effect (already seen) - a strange feeling when in a certain situation you feel that this has already happened to you, although you do not know where and when.
There is a theory that attempts to explain this phenomenon by the fact that you may have actually already experienced a similar situation before. Being in this familiar situation "causes fragments of memories that have been preserved in our brain," notes Dr. Kaku.
This theory was experimentally proved and "explains the majority of deja vu cases," the doctor added.
However, quantum physics admits that there is a possibility of a deja vu state arising from your ability to "move between different universes."
Glitches in the matrix
Dr. Kaku cites the analogy of Steve Weinberg, a well-known theoretical physicist who received the Nobel Prize, who introduced the concept of "Multiverse" (Multiverse) in quantum physics related to the concept of radio waves.
Just as there are radio waves of different frequencies, there are multidimensional universes existing in tandem. The radio is tuned to a certain frequency, i.e., the only radio station, so our universe consists of atoms that oscillate at a unique frequency different from other universes.
Universes usually vibrate not "in phase" with other universes of the same frequency because of temporal differences, but when they are "in phase", it is theoretically possible to move between universes.
So, perhaps when you feel the effect of deja vu, you "vibrate in unison" with the parallel universe, Dr. Kaku explains.