Crissy Chance, J.D., LL.M. by Douglas E Roff
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Overview: The “many-worlds interpretation”, or MWI, is an interpretation of quantum mechanics that asserts the objective reality of the universal wavefunction and denies the actuality of wavefunction collapse. Many-worlds implies that all possible alternate histories and futures are real, each representing an actual "world" (or "universe").
Genre: Fantasy
In layman’s terms, the hypothesis states there is a very large – perhaps infinite – number of Universes, and everything that could possibly have happened in our past, but did not, has occurred in the past of some other universe or universes.
The MWI hypothesis is also referred to as the relative state formulation, the Everett interpretation, the theory of the universal wavefunction, many-universes interpretation, multi-history or just many-worlds.
For the purposes of this book, all futures are undetermined, and, as with all possibilities, the implications of small changes within a specific Universe can have unintended consequences. If God or man tinkers with an established variation of a Universe, the long-term consequences to that Universe are unknowable; think “butterfly effect”. In this book, and in other sequels to the Cryptid Trilogy, principal characters are dropped into alternate, but very similar universes, to reimagine how the same lives might be different in a new Universe from a ‘baseline’ or seminal universe into which that character was originally born.
In Crissy Chance, all of the principal characters were born in the timeline of the Trilogy, but have come back to life as different iterations in the sequels. When characters are reimagined, they are given new attributes; they may or may not resemble the characters from the earlier novels. Good guys can become bad guys. Technically, each sequel re-starts the plot and therefore the characters too. It can be confusing or even disappointing, particularly if your favorite character from an earlier novel morphs into a hideous figure in a sequel.
If the Hindu concept of Reincarnation is considered, I suggest that it is a form of Immortality without shared consciousness between lives; sequential birth, life, death and rebirth. And Immortality is explored as the basis of plot carryover from one novel to the next, beginning with the Trilogy and its characters.
In this book, the senses feed the brain which connects to the mind. The brain and the mind are not identical and do not have the same function though they are intimately connected. The mind is comprised of separate conscious and unconscious components, which in the case of one character, and one character only, are fused into one, unlike in our real world. They are merged with positive outcomes, creating an entirely new branch of the human species.
Some aspects of this plot device and others are loosely based on the teachings of Dr. Rupert Murdoch, though for reference only. I claim no detailed understanding of Dr. Murdoch’s teaching, though I am an admirer and find his synthesis of the spiritual and the material to be aligned with my own beliefs.
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