Death Doesn't Exist And May Just Be An Illusion, According To Quantum Physics.
In a world where there’s no time or space, the concept of death doesn’t make sense because death is tied to time—it’s about something ending. Instead of thinking about living forever in time (immortality), this would mean existing completely outside of time.
Recent experiments with light particles have shown that they can interact instantly, no matter how far apart they are, as if space and time don’t matter. This suggests that the way we think about time, space, and even life and death might not be entirely accurate.
Imagine you’re watching a movie on a DVD. From your perspective, the movie plays out scene by scene, with a beginning, middle, and end—that’s how time feels to us. But the entire movie already exists on the disc all at once. If you step outside of watching the movie, you can jump to any part of it right away, without needing to watch it in order. There's no "before" or "after," just the whole movie existing all at once.
In the same way, if you existed outside of time, life and death wouldn’t be events that happen in order—they’d just be, like all the scenes on the DVD existing at the same time. The experiments with light particles show something similar: they can communicate instantly, as if space and time don’t separate them, hinting that reality might work more like the DVD than the scene-by-scene experience we’re used to.
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