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<DIV>I have just been watching a show on Discovery Science about a lay version
of quantum mechanics. At one point the moderator was talking about the notion of
entanglement and explained how in theory this involves the connection of
entangled particles over any distance instantaneously. He then continued to say
that given the big bang theory, all of existence was at a single point and then
expanded (inflated) from then to the great distances, billions of light years,
we witness today. But at the initial moment after the singularity, all the
particles of the universe were close enough to possibly become entangled with
some other, but then after the expansion, the partner entangled particle might
have ended up in some distant far removed galaxy and but thereby
still be related to its entangled partner particle perhaps now in our body here
on Earth.</DIV>
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<DIV>I then thought back to some of the earlier discussions here on Avodah about
the purpose of these distant galaxies that could never affect us here on Earth
and that we did not even know existed until recently. Perhaps this possibility
of entanglement with distant particles of those galaxies from the time of
creation may provide some logic to the purpose of the existence of those distant
galaxies?</DIV>
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<DIV>Happy Chanukah veKol tuv</DIV>
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<DIV>Chaim Manaster</DIV>
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