Explaining Magic, part 3
Time for my physical theory of magic. As a reminder, it's totally fictional, applies to fictional universes like MLP, and I don't think that's how physics works in real life.
For simplicity, let's imagine the universe as a two-dimensional object, it will be easier to think of its shape that way. So what shape can it be? It can be like a Möbius strip, which has only one side, but it can also be like a normal sheet of paper, which has two sides. (But it doesn't have edges, so you can imagine that when you go to the left, you emerge on the right, like in Pac-Man games. And when you go up, you emerge at the bottom.)
So what if the other side is a universe of its own? Moreover, a universe different than ours. The laws of physics, and the kind of objects that can be found there are different, but most importantly, time flows in the opposite direction. By which I mean the thermodynamic arrow of time. So if there are any sentient beings in that "mirror universe", their past is our future, and vice versa. Then magic can be a force that can break the barrier between the two universes, and allow transferring some things between them. This will explain the ability to break the second law of thermodynamics and to go back in time. And some other magical effects can be caused by the differences between the laws of physics in the universes. I know it's not a highly developed theory, and it doesn't explain every magical effect in detail, but I think it's a good way to think about how magic works.
Next week I'll probably go back to math, but I'm running out of ideas, so if you have anything in mind that I should write about (I mean things of similar kind to the ones I already did in this blog), then go ahead and propose it in the comments.
- 3
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