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Wasn't the idea that the 5th dimension was something to do with probability from Mostly Harmless?
One thing that I deliberately didn't mention before is that the extra dimension in which space is curved is time. I thought that might confuse, and you don't really need to know that it is the case when you're trying to imagine curved space. Space and time aren't really seperate, but different aspects of the same thing.
As far as I know, there isn't a connection between parallel universes and extra dimensions. String theorists will claim that there are 10, 11 or 26 dimensions. I don't know how they reached those conclusions, but I do know that all the arguments for string theory are based on mathematical beauty. By all accounts string theory is startlingly elegant and beautiful, but that doesn't change the fact it is yet to produce a single experimental prediction, and that makes it quite contraversial. String theorists say that the extra dimensions are curled up in such a way that if you move even a very small amount in an extra direction you will return to where you started. It's like the universe being the surface of a hosepipe. If it's a thin hose, and you were looking at it from a distance, you might think it was just one dimensional, but actually there is a second dimension, you could go around the hose. String theorists think the universe is a bit like that, but with the extra dimensions being really tiny, so we don't see them.
Parallel universes seem to be brought up for two different reasons:
1. To explain the apparent fine tuning of the universe. There are physical constants that have to be set very specifically for the universe to be suitable for life. If you changed the strength of gravity, even to the fifteenth decimal place, then either the universe would have recollapsed after the Big Bang and formed a black hole or everything would have expanded forever and never formed stars and galaxies. Many people suggest that there are an infinite numer of universes, each with slightly different physical constants. It makes it seem less like luck that we are able to exist.
2. As a possible interpretation of quantum theory. It is claimed that there are myriad universes and that when something for which quantum effects are significant is measured, different universes will measure different things. That is an over-simplified and dulled down description of them, but they're worth reading about. I recommend The Fabric of Reality by David Deutsch. Though this interpretation is a minority viewpoint, it is a perfectly respectable one.
Interesting.
Do you know of any theories about the causality of the Big Bang? As in what prompted it? Does the Universe supposedly expand to such a point where it contracts and eventually starts all over again? Hence the Big Bang. The idea that before the Big Bang there was "nothing" no space, no time etc is an amazing thought beyond any humans' comprehension, and I'm of the belief that there is a scientific explanation for everything.





