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  2. Hugh Everett III - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Everett_III

    Hugh Everett III was born in 1930 and raised in the Washington, D.C. area. His parents separated when he was young. Initially raised by his mother (Katherine Lucille Everett, née Kennedy), he was raised by his father (Hugh Everett, Jr.) and stepmother (Sarah Everett, née Thrift) from the age of seven.

  3. Many-worlds interpretation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretation

    A study of the painful three-way relationship between Hugh Everett, John A Wheeler and Niels Bohr and how this affected the early development of the many-worlds theory. David Wallace, Worlds in the Everett Interpretation, Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, 33, (2002), pp. 637–661, arXiv:quant-ph/0103092

  4. Mark Oliver Everett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Oliver_Everett

    Mark Oliver Everett. Mark Oliver Everett (born April 10, 1963) is an American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and the frontman of the rock band Eels. Also known as E, he is known for writing songs tackling subjects such as death, loneliness, divorce, childhood innocence, depression, and unrequited love, often from personal experience.

  5. Parallel Worlds, Parallel Lives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_Worlds,_Parallel...

    26 November 2007. ( 2007-11-26) Parallel Worlds, Parallel Lives is a BAFTA -winning [3] television documentary broadcast in 2007 on BBC Scotland and BBC Four, in which American rock musician Mark Oliver Everett talks with physicists and the former colleagues of his father— Hugh Everett —about his father's many-worlds interpretation of ...

  6. Electro-Shock Blues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electro-Shock_Blues

    Many of the songs deal with their decline, his response to loss and coming to terms with suddenly becoming the only living member of his family (his father, Dr. Hugh Everett III, having died of a heart attack in 1982; Everett, then 19 years old, was the first to discover his body).

  7. Universal wavefunction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_wavefunction

    The concept of universal wavefunction was introduced by Hugh Everett in his 1956 PhD thesis draft The Theory of the Universal Wave Function. It later received investigation from James Hartle and Stephen Hawking who derived the Hartle–Hawking solution to the Wheeler–deWitt equation to explain the initial conditions of the Big Bang cosmology.

  8. Multiverse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiverse

    The multiverse is the hypothetical set of all universes. [a] Together, these universes are presumed to comprise everything that exists: the entirety of space, time, matter, energy, information, and the physical laws and constants that describe them. The different universes within the multiverse are called "parallel universes", "flat universes ...

  9. Quantum suicide and immortality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_suicide_and...

    Quantum suicide and immortality. Quantum suicide is a thought experiment in quantum mechanics and the philosophy of physics. Purportedly, it can falsify any interpretation of quantum mechanics other than the Everett many-worlds interpretation by means of a variation of the Schrödinger's cat thought experiment, from the cat's point of view.