“It's no use going back to yesterday because I was a different person then.” - Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland.
Do you think that forgiveness of the enemy today or in the near future can affect the outcome of the war, slavery and deprivation that our ancestors endured? It may sound strange, but recent experiments by quantum scientists have proven that what happens in the future can affect the past.
Our entire reality is an abstraction, proven recently by an experiment carried out in Australia, where particles in the past changed depending on their observation and measurement in the future. Until they were measured, their "reality" remained flexible.
We are all made of subatomic particles. For a simple explanation of the quantum world, you can watch the video where “Dr. Quantum “explains the famous double slit experiment.
As the double cut explains, the quantum world can be strange. Things don't seem to follow normal logic. They can be two things at once, and there are many possibilities before observation.
Particles can even travel through "material" objects, like a ghost moving through walls. Unsurprisingly, Einstein called the quantum world "creepy." Then Niels Bohr, a pioneer of quantum theory, said:
However, this latest experiment proves that time can go backwards at the subatomic level. Lead researcher Andrew Truscott said in a press release that physicists have proven that "reality doesn't exist if you don't look at it."
Promotional video:
Only recently has light been captured in a photograph in both particle and wave states at the same time.
Subatomic light wave / particle.
Using other quantum theories, scientists have established that a subatomic particle can also exist in more than one place at a time. This is denoted by the term "nonlocality".
These findings are confirmation. However, some of the greatest paradoxes of ancient wisdom are that what we do in this time and space in which we live and “exist” in material form affects all other time and space.
Paul Davis, a British mathematician physicist who is now professor of physics and natural philosophy at the University of Adelaide, says:
“It's very difficult for me to admit that our existence in the world is something that just happens. It seems to me that the fact that the universe is self-conscious is what is written in the laws of nature. We are here as part of the action, not just for the journey."
If these quantum experiments are correct, we could rewrite our own history and simultaneously change future results. Imagine the worlds we could create! Alice's wonders just got more interesting.