When Quantum Physics Meets Culture: Exploring the Multiverse
Via Medium
Summary
The concept of the multiverse — rooted in physicist Hugh Everett's 1957 Many-Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics — has undergone a remarkable cultural transformation, migrating from the margins of theoretical physics into mainstream entertainment and everyday conversation. Films like "Everything Everywhere All at Once," which swept the 2023 Academy Awards with seven wins, brought the idea of branching parallel realities to mass audiences in an emotionally resonant form.
Scientists note a significant gap between how physicists discuss the multiverse — as a mathematical consequence of certain quantum interpretations, not a proven empirical claim — and how popular culture deploys it as a device for exploring regret, identity, and alternate life paths. The cultural embrace of the multiverse reflects a broader public fascination with quantum physics as a source of existential possibility, even as physicists caution that the pop-science version often bears little resemblance to the actual mathematics.