More like parallel universes.Never watched Fringe, but that little bit at the end sure has me intrigued.
Are they playing around with alternate timelines again?
Well, technically, it would be an alternate timeline.More like parallel universes.Never watched Fringe, but that little bit at the end sure has me intrigued.
Are they playing around with alternate timelines again?
Well, technically, it would be an alternate timeline.More like parallel universes.Never watched Fringe, but that little bit at the end sure has me intrigued.
Are they playing around with alternate timelines again?
Parallel universes have completely different laws of physics.
The problem is that those terms get thrown around and mixed up a lot in SciFi.
Parallel Universe means a universe that was created through different starting conditions. In other words, a different Big Bang.
As long as an alternate reality shares its origin with ours, it's just an alternate timeline taking place in our universe.
Fringe clearly depicts an alternate timeline, where laws of Physics, people and locations are the same, but where events unfolded differently.
Yes, I know all that. But what you are describing are alternate timelines.
Just watch this:
http://www.tenthdimension.com/medialinks.php
But parallel universes are not defined like that.
Everett was describing alternate timelines, but called them "universes" because he didn't know any better.
Imagine it like an onion. The onion is the universe. The layers within it are all timelines that are possible within that universe.
But there are other onions that have different shapes. And those onions have layers of their own.
Now, if you're describing a reality where the universe is exactly the same as ours, you're talking about a layer (read: timeline).
...but the comic book Ex Machina still holds the biscuit in these matters.
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