alternate universe

English

Alternative forms

Noun

alternate universe (plural alternate universes)

  1. (physics, cosmology) A hypothetical world situated in a different dimension of space and time than the real world consisting of the universe known and experienced by human beings.
    • 2000, Michael D. Lemonick, "Will We Discover Another Universe?," Time, 10 Apr.,
      The first credible suggestion that alternate universes might exist came in the early 1950s when a young physics graduate student named Hugh Everett was toying with some of the more bizarre implications of quantum mechanics.
  2. (literature, narratology) An imaginary realm, often a variant form of the real world, depicting a different way events could have unfolded or the universe could have functioned.
    • 1980, Maxine Greene, "Response to Philip Jackson," Curriculum Inquiry, vol. 10, no. 2, p. 173,
      There are moments when he seems to be writing something on the order of Jorge Luis Borges's "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius"—an amazing fragment about the alternate universe where every book contains its counterbook, where things become duplicated and "also tend to become effaced and lose their details when they are forgotten."
    • 1995, Richard Corliss, "Where Nice Guys Finish First," Time, 20 Nov.,
      This American President exists in an alternate universe from the one the real Bill Clinton must inhabit.

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