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00:00 Have you ever felt as though there could be more to reality? Like there are whole worlds
00:05 somewhere out there, hidden from view? Research into parallel universes has dramatically accelerated
00:11 in recent years, and with good reason, because many now believe that there's more to this life
00:17 than just this life. This is Unveiled, and today we're answering the extraordinary question;
00:24 Do Parallel Universes Exist?
00:27 Do you need the big questions answered? Are you constantly curious? Then why not subscribe
00:32 to Unveiled for more clips like this one? And ring the bell for more thought-provoking content.
00:36 While the concept of parallel universes can be traced as far back as ancient Greece,
00:45 it wasn't until 1957 that the idea really took hold. It was in that year that Hugh Everett
00:50 established the first major "multiverse theory", suggesting that our universe coexists parallel to
00:56 an infinite number of other universes. From here, many came to believe that you might be able to
01:01 cross over and intersect at various points in time and space, across an intricate web of
01:07 interdimensional doorways. And although the multiverse is yet to be officially proven,
01:11 and therefore remains theoretical, there are several stories and legends of incidents so
01:16 seemingly inexplicable that they are suggestions of a glitch in this hidden structure.
01:20 [MUSIC]
01:30 For today's first case, we're headed to Japan, and to an oft-repeated tale of the man from Torred.
01:36 Exact dates tend to differ between retellings of this story, but it's generally said that,
01:41 sometime in the mid-to-late 1950s, a man presented his passport at a Tokyo airport,
01:46 expecting to be let through the gate. All his documents seemed to be in order, except for one
01:50 thing - the country that had issued the passport, Torred, did not exist. Assuming he was some kind
01:56 of criminal, the customs officers at the airport allegedly held the man for questioning. Bizarrely,
02:02 when he was asked to point Torred out on a map, he could apparently do so, only it was labelled
02:07 as what we know to be Andorra, instead. According to the man, the unknown country of Torred was a
02:13 thousand years old, though, and he was reportedly able to show the officers several official
02:17 passport stamps as well as currencies from various other countries where he had seemingly had
02:22 business in the past, to further prove his case. Naturally, the officers did a little more digging,
02:28 according to most versions of the story, and called up the company the man claimed to work for.
02:33 They discovered that it did exist, but not in anywhere known as Torred. The hotel at which
02:38 the man insisted he had a reservation was also called. And again, it was real, but no reservation
02:44 was found under the correct name. The officers were then at a loss. Everything seemed to be
02:49 legitimate and in order, except for the fairly significant fact that Torred, and by extension,
02:54 the man himself, just did not exist. Pending further investigation, it's said that the man
03:00 was then sent to a nearby hotel, where he was placed under armed guard, with the suspicion
03:05 being that he may still be a criminal of some kind. However, after just one night's stay,
03:10 in the morning, the man was gone. And all his documents, too. Every trace of him had vanished,
03:16 and he was supposedly never heard from again. So, what happened? Perhaps unsurprisingly,
03:21 this tale is seen by some as just a complicated hoax. Official records of the mystery man don't,
03:27 after all, appear to exist. And his story has some similarities to another case of a genuine
03:33 fraudster, again in Japan, around that same time. But still, some believe that he really was a
03:39 visitor from a parallel universe, who had accidentally spliced between his world and ours.
03:44 Ultimately, his fate remains unknown. For our second story, we're heading a century further
03:50 back in time, to news of a case first published in the UK in 1851. The report centered on the
03:56 small German village of Frankfurt an der Oder, where a man was reportedly discovered wandering
04:01 around in a confused haze. When questioned by the local authorities, he allegedly managed to explain
04:06 that his name was Joffar or Joseph Vorin, and that he had no idea where he was. He claimed that he
04:13 had come to Germany in search of his brother, but had previously been shipwrecked in an unknown
04:17 location. The man insisted that he was originally from a country called Luxaria, though, a place
04:23 that no one else had ever heard of because it doesn't exist. Vorin is said to have explained
04:28 that Luxaria was found in a continent-like region of Earth called Sacria, but again, no one had heard
04:35 of such a place. What's more, Vorin couldn't retrace his trip to that point on a map and
04:40 didn't recognise any of the names of the continents as we know them. He reportedly continued to reveal
04:46 more about his home world, though, explaining that the Earth he knew was divided into five
04:51 main regions in total, apparently called Sacria, Aflar, Aslar, Oslar, and Euplar. He professed to
05:00 speak fluent Luxarian, too, as well as a second unknown language of Abramian. Finally, and again
05:07 according to reports at the time, he described himself as a follower of Christianity, but of an
05:11 unknown branch called Ispachian. It's said that authorities ultimately sent him to Berlin for
05:17 further questioning, with some retellings claiming that he escaped on his way there,
05:22 never to be heard from again. As with the man from Tora, though, there is little by way of an
05:26 official record of Vorin's appearance, and especially of his alleged disappearance at the
05:31 end of the story. So could this simply be another hoax? Or was there really an error in the multiverse
05:38 once more, before Vorin was sent back to his own reality? Unlike with our first two stories,
05:44 where residents of alternate universes purportedly visit our own, today's remaining two tales are of
05:50 individuals from our reality allegedly making an accidental visit into a foreign dimension.
05:55 The first has been widely attributed to an account given by a Dr. Raul Centeno in Peru,
06:01 concerning the country's infamously spooky Markowoski Stone Forest. Centeno claims to
06:07 have treated a woman who accidentally passed through an interdimensional doorway that can
06:12 be found somewhere within this particular piece of the South American landscape. Centeno's patient,
06:17 along with a group of friends, reportedly decided to go for a night hike through the woods there,
06:23 when they happened across a small wooden cabin, clearly with people inside. So the story goes,
06:29 the group soon discovered that the people in the cabin were incongruously dressed in old-fashioned,
06:34 what's usually described as 17th century, clothing. It's then said that the hikers
06:39 claimed to have quickly felt an unusual, out-of-control desire to join in with the
06:44 unexpected celebration. And so the woman, Centeno's patient, attempted to enter the cabin,
06:50 before her friends changed their minds and pulled her back. But not before half of her body had
06:56 passed through the doorway. It was allegedly then that the woman discovered that the side of her
07:01 body that had passed through the door had become paralysed. This was predominantly why she sought
07:06 treatment from Dr. Centeno in the first place, who diagnosed her with hemiplegia. But, despite the
07:12 diagnosis, the doctor couldn't decipher a clear cause for this sudden and inexplicable condition.
07:17 Instead, reports are that he believes that the woman's unfortunate fate may have been the result
07:23 of a brief visit into an alternate dimension - one lying just beyond that mysterious,
07:28 Markawassi doorway. Finally, one Pedro Oliva Ramirez also reportedly took a wrong turn
07:35 through another universe, but this time in Spain in November of 1986. According to another of the
07:41 most infamous and widespread interdimensional claims out there, Ramirez was on his usual route
07:47 home from work in the city of Seville when he passed by an odd and previously unknown part of
07:52 the road - an instantly peculiar six-lane highway that he definitely didn't recognise. Along the
07:58 side of this new road were tall buildings that Ramirez had never seen before, despite travelling
08:03 that way on most days. It gets stranger, though, because Ramirez then reportedly felt a hot and
08:10 distinct temperature change in his car and he heard a series of voices allegedly informing him
08:16 that he had been transported to a different hemisphere. Unsure of how to proceed, the story
08:21 typically continues that Ramirez drove until he came to an intersection with signs pointing in
08:27 three directions. Taking one of the roads and believing he was headed back to Seville, Ramirez
08:32 was apparently amazed when his car came to a stop, he glanced out of his window, and found that he
08:38 was parked right in front of his home - where he had been trying to get to all along. It's said
08:43 that a confused Ramirez then tried to retrace his steps several times, but he could never find his
08:48 way back to that six-lane highway. So, how did he get home, and who were the voices that spoke to
08:54 him through his car? To this day, it's a mystery. Importantly, with all four of these cases,
09:00 there's precious little by way of an official account or an official investigation. These
09:05 tales predominantly exist as urban legends, but some of them have been debated for decades now,
09:11 and with no clear solutions. From Star Trek to Marvel, and everywhere in between,
09:21 science fiction loves itself a good old-fashioned interweaving tale of parallel universes.
09:29 But for some, for increasing numbers in fact, the idea that this reality isn't all there is,
09:37 is really starting to catch on. Other dimensions and apparent glitches between here and there
09:44 continually crop up in actual, real life.
09:57 The Incredible Story of Lorena Garcia from Spain. In 2008, when Garcia was 41 years old,
10:05 she posted onto a Spanish online forum asking for help as she'd come to believe that she may have
10:12 jumped into a parallel universe. According to Garcia, the world around her had changed in subtle,
10:20 but definite ways, leading her to think that one morning, she had simply woken up in a different
10:26 version of the reality she had lived in up until the night before. The first change was her
10:32 bedsheet, which she literally didn't recognize as belonging to her. At this point, confused,
10:39 but still not suspecting what was to come, she got up, went through her usual daily routine,
10:46 and went to work. But when she got there, she found unknown people in her building,
10:52 and then that her name had been replaced on her office door. After a little searching,
10:58 she found that while she did still work for the same company, she was apparently employed in a
11:05 totally different position. The day before, everything had been as it normally was, but today,
11:12 everything was different. By now, Lorena was beginning to get seriously worried,
11:19 and so she visited her doctor to check for any physical abnormalities, including the possible
11:25 presence of drugs or alcohol in her system. But she was given a clean bill of health,
11:30 no substances were present, and was sent on her way. Things quickly got even stranger, however,
11:37 when her own boyfriend was nowhere to be found. But when she then came to learn that she was,
11:43 in fact, still with her ex-boyfriend, who she'd broken up with a few months beforehand,
11:49 her entire life had seemingly rewritten itself. Other members of Garcia's family were at least
11:56 the same people, but more inconsistencies kept coming up, including that her sister had apparently
12:03 no longer had shoulder surgery, despite Garcia distinctly remembering that she just recently
12:09 had been to the hospital for the procedure, and also that many of Garcia's messages and emails
12:16 had apparently disappeared too. For the most part, the rest of the world hadn't drastically changed,
12:23 but this one person's personal life had dramatically altered. And while it's difficult
12:30 to verify the story, some believe that Garcia had fallen victim to a "reality slip", leaving her
12:38 just a few timelines removed from her original. Next, the story of an anonymous blogger who goes
12:45 by the name of James Richards, and who also claims to have experienced a parallel world
12:51 where the Beatles never broke up. His story, again posted online, and which he claims happened on
12:58 September 9th, 2009, is certainly attention-grabbing. First, he says that he cannot reveal his true name
13:06 due to safety concerns, and then he reveals all about how he came to own an apparent,
13:12 genuine Beatles album that was never actually released in this reality. According to his
13:19 account, Richards, with his dog, had been driving through Del Puerto Canyon, California, when he
13:25 pulled over for a rest and to let his dog out for a walk. When the dog started chasing down a rabbit,
13:31 though, Richards ran in pursuit, literally fell or tripped down a rabbit hole and wound up
13:37 unconscious. When he came to, he was in a strange room in a strange house. His head had been
13:44 bandaged, and judging by outside noise, he was no longer in a rural location like the one he just
13:50 left. Soon, another man entered his room. The man introduced himself as Jonas, and Richards
13:58 thanked him for his help before asking a load of questions. Where was he? How did he get here?
14:04 And was his dog okay? Thankfully, the dog was there, too, and totally fine. But the other questions
14:11 had far less straightforward answers. Richards says that Jonas then revealed to him that he was
14:18 actually just a few feet away from where he had fallen. The house, and apparent town outside,
14:24 hadn't been there before, however, because Jonas had also taken Richards to a parallel world,
14:31 to an alternate dimension that he, Jonas, called home. Jonas then went on to explain that in his
14:38 world, parallel travel machines were all the rage. Yes, they could be dangerous, but they were also
14:46 a wholly accepted technology. Richards suggests that parallel travel may have even superseded
14:54 space travel in this other place. The pair then spent the next few hours together, including for
15:00 a meal that Richards says was basically normal except for purple ketchup. The really interesting
15:08 hook, though, came when they started talking about music. Richards discovered that in Jonas' world,
15:16 the Beatles were still touring. The iconic Liverpool group were still together, with all
15:21 four members still very much alive. Jonas had a collection of albums, too, mostly on tape,
15:27 as Richards says that CDs had never really caught on in the other dimension. There was a version of
15:33 Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band on the other side, although Richards recalls that the famous
15:39 cover looked slightly different in some ways. Better still, there were later albums, post-Beatles
15:47 breakup in our timeline, that Richards had never seen or heard before. He and Jonas apparently
15:54 whiled away some of their time together, listening to all of that later material.
15:59 Finally, and just before Jonas transported Richards back to his own reality, Richards says that he
16:05 managed to steal one of the later tapes, which, according to his blog post, has the title "Everyday
16:12 Chemistry". Upon returning to this plane of reality then, Richards uploaded "Everyday Chemistry" for
16:19 all to hear, an apparently never-before-seen Beatles album, because it really doesn't exist
16:27 for us. It was soon pointed out that the "new tracks" sounded very much like variously mashed-up
16:33 versions of some of the Beatles' solo material, but one counter-argument says that that isn't so
16:41 unexpected. After all, in just a slightly altered version of reality, John, Paul, George, and Ringo
16:49 might well have had many of the same ideas again, mightn't they? What do you think about the bizarre
16:56 Beatles story and the unnerving tale of Lorena Garcia? Both have their own unique space in the
17:03 modern history of the strange and unknown, but could they really serve as proof of parallel universes?
17:11 Science is no stranger to the big questions. From the beginning of the universe to the fabric
17:22 of reality itself, we're always trying to find answers. But when it comes to the multiverse,
17:30 the boundaries between right and wrong, between probable and improbable, dramatically widen,
17:38 enough to leave you questioning your very existence in time.
17:54 Midway through the 21st century, we're at a potentially crucial bridge for modern research
18:01 between the macro and micro worlds. Work around quantum physics has taken off in a big way,
18:09 but, bizarrely, its greatest impact could yet be to do with one of the largest structures imaginable,
18:17 the multiverse. Starting with Hugh Everett's many-worlds interpretation, a then game-changing
18:24 theory when it was put forward in the late 1950s, we've grown to develop a number of hypotheses
18:30 around the idea that this world isn't all there is. Broadly, it's said that whenever a decision
18:38 is made, reality is split into two separate planes. Usually, this is visualized via large
18:46 and clear decisions, such as choosing between an apple and orange for lunch, or taking the left
18:53 or right turn at a junction. The idea is that even when you decide to turn left, there's another you,
19:00 in another parallel universe, that decides to turn right, and your lives diverge forever based on
19:07 that one point in time. However, at the quantum level, the same concept can be applied to create
19:14 an infinitely more intricate mesh, a truly never-ending multiverse of realities. Now,
19:22 every time an atom splits, every time a molecule is made, or even every time light moves between
19:30 wave and particle, a new reality is potentially born. Only here, the differences between each
19:38 and every one of them are so infinitesimally small that we, in our macro state, could never
19:45 hope to recognize them. In an extreme variation, we could be talking about one world where the
19:51 only difference is that you have one hair less on your head than you do in this one, or another
19:57 where the atmospheric makeup of a planet that's thousands of light-years away is just ever so
20:04 slightly different, but everything else is the same. Importantly, this isn't where all multiverse
20:11 models lead. Most don't go so far, but the principles at play can still take us there,
20:17 and perhaps it could be argued that it's even an inevitable endpoint. To even try to contemplate
20:25 a reality web that's so closely woven between one layer and the next is, frankly, a major headache
20:33 for us mere mortals. But could that mean that we're actually moving across that web all the time?
20:41 We're just wholly unaware because nothing's ever actually noticeable.
20:48 We took a closer look at the story of Lorena Garcia. To briefly recap, Garcia was aged 41
20:54 in the year 2008 when she posted claims on a Spanish online forum about how she believed
21:01 she had woken up in a parallel universe. Among the apparently unexplained changes she encountered on
21:08 that one fateful day were waking up in a bed made with sheets she didn't own, arriving at her place
21:14 of work only to find that her office and position had changed, as if overnight, and realizing that
21:21 not only was she still dating her ex-partner, but her until-yesterday current partner was literally
21:28 nowhere to be found. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the story has never been fully corroborated,
21:35 but some have suggested that Garcia may have fallen victim to a so-called "reality slip."
21:42 Her surrounding world was otherwise unchanged. She reported no major differences in global
21:48 politics, for example, or fundamental physics. It was just that certain parts of her own life
21:55 were inexplicably altered. It's said that Garcia herself believed that she had entered a kind of
22:02 parallel universe. If, for the sake of argument, we take Garcia at her word, then here is an example
22:10 of someone entering a parallel world and realizing that they've done so. But although the changes were
22:17 apparently noticeable to Garcia, she would still have needed to skip a lot of timelines to make
22:24 those changes possible, as per many world-style multiverse models. Consider her reported change
22:31 of position at her place of work. How many decisions does it take for you to land a job
22:36 in the first place? How many assignments need completing, meetings need to be held,
22:41 deadlines need to be met, etc. There are countless different points in time at which her path might
22:48 have diverted, all of which she will have presumably had to have reversed back through,
22:54 to then emerge with a different job entirely. Even the unknown bedsheets she woke up in.
23:01 To buy bedsheets, you need to enter a certain shop, choose to spend a certain amount of money,
23:07 decide on that one product based on countless other preferences, and all the while the
23:13 subatomic world silently hums through endless splits and decisions of its own, all around you.
23:20 All of those moments in time would need to have been skipped back through just for Garcia to awake
23:26 on some unfamiliar cotton. Interestingly, Garcia did reportedly visit a doctor to check,
23:34 among other things, whether she was under the influence of drugs or alcohol. So, even with such
23:41 personally massive changes, she seemingly had some inkling to doubt herself. And as it happens,
23:48 no substances were found in her system, although doctors could find no other explanation for her
23:55 experiences either. Consider then how it might feel if you ever felt your life was different,
24:02 but much less dramatically so, if you felt that there was just something off, but you couldn't
24:10 put your finger on what exactly that something was. You, perhaps, wouldn't be worried enough
24:16 to visit a doctor, as Garcia was, but you might be left with a real sense of unease.
24:22 Of course, there are certain real-life phenomena that inspire something similar in some people,
24:29 including déjà vu, the Mandela Effect, and lucid dreaming. Sometimes these sensations are loosely
24:35 referred to as "glitches in the matrix." Sometimes it's joked that they're the multiverse at work.
24:43 Regardless, if parallel universes do exist, which increasing numbers of theories reckon they do,
24:50 then could we ever hope to confidently tell the difference between one and the next and the next?
24:59 If we ever were presented with proof, would we believe it, or even properly recognize it?
25:07 As per some of the more extreme interpretations, the multiverse, if it does exist,
25:14 is unfathomably rich and complex. In just the time it's taken for you to watch this video,
25:20 reality will have subatomically split off into countless different directions, leaving you
25:26 here, in this reality, but other yous enjoying any one of those other realms.
25:34 In today's world, it's increasingly accepted that, really, there could be countless other
25:38 worlds out there that we don't yet know about, and perhaps can't even comprehend. The multiverse
25:43 is alive and kicking as a mind-bending concept, but also, increasingly, as a physical consideration.
25:51 What would you do if you could enter into a parallel universe? Would you do things differently,
25:55 or exactly the same as you have in this reality? Would you seek out your parallel self and make
26:00 contact just to freak them out a bit? Or would you try to guide history through the shadows?
26:06 Would you try to make a connection with the universe? Or would you try to make a connection
26:11 with the universe's unknown? What would you do?
26:13 Would you seek out your parallel self and make contact just to freak them out a bit? Or would you try to guide history through the shadows?
26:20 Let us know in the comments. But, beyond sci-fi thought experiment, is any of it actually possible?
26:26 The multiverse is a fundamental idea that dates back probably far further than most would guess
26:31 to the famed philosophies of Ancient Greece. However, in the modern sense, it only truly
26:36 began to take hold toward the end of the nineteenth century. It was only seriously
26:40 considered for the first time in the mid-twentieth century, and it only appeared in science fiction
26:45 for the first time in the early 1960s. As ideas go, then, the multiverse is still an emerging one.
26:51 And while it remains wholly hypothetical, it comes in many different varieties. The most
26:56 well-known of the more contemporary models is arguably Max Tegmark's four-leveled multiverse,
27:02 which imagines a physical structure that could hold it all together, with varying degrees of
27:06 complexity. No matter the model, though, it's almost always thought that to travel across the
27:11 multiverse, to move from one parallel world to another, would require an unfathomable amount
27:16 of energy. Even an Einstein-Rosen bridge or wormhole wouldn't be enough in this instance.
27:22 Traditional wormholes are imagined structures that pierce through the fabric of spacetime
27:27 to link between two locations that are potentially lightyears apart. As such,
27:31 they're a proposed means to achieve faster-than-light travel. While there are theories
27:36 as to how and where they could form, however - including inside the deepest depths of a black
27:40 hole - there are no confirmed wormholes, in reality. And, in fact, there are no known
27:45 sites in the universe with even the hint of a wormhole about them. Nevertheless, we can still
27:50 speculate, to some degree, over building one. And, indeed, some have proposed that an advanced
27:55 enough civilization could even build itself on a sophisticated network of wormholes. The only
28:01 problem is that we, as we are, know of no physical substance that's strong or energetic enough for
28:07 the task. For this reason, whenever the construction of wormholes is considered,
28:11 the plans always require so-called "exotic matter" - which, broadly, is an unknown and
28:17 possibly physically impossible material. And even then, most predictions are that a traditional
28:23 wormhole would inevitably collapse in on itself whenever it was actually used. All of this goes
28:29 to show just how alien it would be to travel between parallel universes. Wormholes are
28:34 generally offered as an option to traverse just this universe… and even they are currently
28:39 incomprehensible. We'd need something even more exotic and unusual, then, to move from this
28:44 universe to another one. On the Kardashev Scale, this is the massive difference between the already
28:49 lofty Type Four and the even greater Type Five. For a physical, carbon-based, organic human being
28:56 such as ourselves, it's almost certainly not going to happen. And if it did somehow happen,
29:01 it could in all likelihood kill us… in a way something akin to the spaghettification of our
29:06 bodies would go through if we were to fall into a black hole. Even the individual atoms that make us
29:12 probably wouldn't survive the journey. That said, what if there were a way to achieve it? What if we,
29:18 as we are, could somehow switch between this universe and another? What kinds of scenarios
29:24 would we be faced with? And how could the experience shape us? First off, to have any
29:29 immediate meaning for us, it would need to be that we'd disappear and reappear in the same place,
29:34 from one universe to another. Much as with hypothetical time travel, even an iota beyond
29:40 our target location and we'd find ourselves entirely cut off from the life we'd just left.
29:45 Such is the enormous scale of the universe and reality. Get it wrong, and moving between
29:50 parallel universes would just be confusing and pointless. But get it right, and we could be
29:55 thrust right back into the life we know, but with an all-new perspective. Next, would you really
30:01 want to meet yourself? Or, to put it another way, should you meet yourself? Imagine that moment from
30:07 the other side, from your current perspective as a being in this reality. How would you react if you
30:12 bumped into you? How would everyone else react if you tried to tell them what had happened?
30:17 How would the world react if the two versions of you were confirmed, and the true nature of reality
30:22 were then revealed? Travel between parallel universes and let other beings know about it?
30:27 And, at best, you could be labelled unstable and/or locked up. At worst, you could trigger
30:33 mass hysteria and the collapse of humankind. Perhaps then, even with this incredible ability,
30:38 you'd be wise to keep it to yourself. But how would you handle such immeasurable power and
30:43 knowledge? It would certainly be easy to form something of a god complex. Make it to a parallel
30:49 universe and keep your true identity secret, and you'd know that you knew more than everyone else
30:54 around you. You'd know that reality really is guided by even the most forgettable decisions,
31:00 if the many-worlds interpretation rings true. Or that there really are higher planes of
31:05 understanding out there, if the Tegmark model is correct. And yet, it could prove a lonely
31:10 and unfulfilling existence. With the secret of life laid bare, would it ever be possible to even
31:15 be interested in anything else again? With the true nature of nature revealed, where would your
31:21 motivation come from? Perhaps there would be a darker path down which you could travel,
31:26 where you stem the boredom by just playing with everyone else's realities. Life, death, love, hate,
31:33 happiness, and fear - the entire range of human emotions - could suddenly seem quite futile. Like
31:40 levels in a game, or expansion packs to complete. Moving around a parallel universe, far removed
31:46 from your original reality. And now, all knowing, you could quickly become mean, merciless, and
31:52 indifferent to such lower-level states as pain and suffering. But, of course, you could also view
31:57 your reality in the opposite way. As somewhere that could benefit from your guidance, you could
32:02 be benevolent rather than malevolent. And rather than seeking infamy or destruction, you could work
32:09 and try to ensure that your parallel universe avoids some of the mistakes that only you know
32:13 were made in your original one. Again, what would you do if you could enter into a parallel universe?
32:20 How would you handle your heightened position? For now, what's clear is that this is a thought
32:25 experiment only. The multiverse is still a wholly hypothetical structure, and humanity knows of no
32:31 way to build even regular wormholes. Let alone bridges that can link between here and, literally,
32:37 another reality entirely. So, what's your verdict? Do the stories at the beginning of this video
32:44 make you believe that parallel universes are real? Has the ordeal of Lorena Garcia left you
32:50 questioning your very existence? Whatever your view, it's clear that there is so much about the
32:55 nature of reality that we just can't be sure of. Unless, of course, you do already knowingly exist
33:02 in a parallel universe. In which case, we're on to you. Your cover has been blown, and the truth
33:08 really has been unveiled.
33:10 [Music]
33:38 Strange things happen all the time. Unexplainable events unfold every day.
33:43 And perhaps that's why parallel universes really could exist.
33:47 What do you think? Is there anything we missed? Let us know in the comments,
33:52 check out these other clips from Unveiled, and make sure you subscribe and ring the bell for
33:57 our latest content.