Robert Lanza, an American theoretical physicist and Ph. D., was able to prove the existence of an afterlife. No religion, occultism and other paranormal stuff: quantum physics helped Lanz to understand this issue.
The physicist considers the very concept of death to be erroneous. In fact, we still rely on the position created by ancient philosophers - the so-called biometric theory, where life creates the world, and not the other way around.
The scientist argues that humanity should turn to the theory of parallel universes: death in one does not mean the end of life, but only the transition of consciousness to another.
This controversial hypothesis is partly proved by the interference experiment of Thomas Young, in the course of which evidence is derived that light is a wave.
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The experiment looks like this: light from one source is directed onto an opaque screen with slots, behind which the screen is installed. The peculiarity of the slots is that their width is approximately equal to the wavelength of the emitted light - not one, but several alternating interference fringes appear on the projection screen.
In the same way, life creates the universe, and not the other way around. If this is true, then humanity no longer needs to fear death, because this is just a journey to another world.