Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at multiverse.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Multiverse.

Examples

  • McKie opens by crediting Moorcock with bringing the term Multiverse to quantum physicists and philosophers, then describes his latest as, tremendous fun for fans of Sherlock Holmes, or perhaps Sexton Blake, so long as they are prepared for occasional forays into the milieu of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, as well as Robert E Howard, creator of Conan the Barbarian...

    Archive 2008-01-01 Lou Anders 2008

  • Multiverse is an outgrowth of String Theory, but is still untestable at this time.

    A True Scientist 2010

  • The entire Multiverse is threatened as the mysterious Libra assembles an army of the DCU†™ s most terrifying super villains.

    DC Comics for May 2008 | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News 2009

  • You write: "Multiverse is an outgrowth of String Theory, but is still untestable at this time."

    A True Scientist 2010

  • Norman Sprinrad's latest On Books column for the April/May edition of Asimov's, "The Multiverse", is a direct response to a piece by Bruno Maddox appearing in Discovery Magazine, “Blinded by Science: Fictional Reality,” in which Maddox hauls out the tired old argument that in helping to build the present, science fiction is now obsolete.

    Archive 2008-03-01 Lou Anders 2008

  • Norman Sprinrad's latest On Books column for the April/May edition of Asimov's, "The Multiverse", is a direct response to a piece by Bruno Maddox appearing in Discovery Magazine, “Blinded by Science: Fictional Reality,” in which Maddox hauls out the tired old argument that in helping to build the present, science fiction is now obsolete.

    On Books: The Multiverse Lou Anders 2008

  • Multiverse is wrong, an omnicient, omnipresent God created everything.

    Behe's response to Many Universes Hypothesis 2007

  • Seeing it all laid out in Multiverse, the parallel between Moorcock's Law vs. Chaos and Wilson's Illuminati vs. Discordians is so obvious.

    Archive 2006-08-01 Lou Anders 2006

  • Seeing it all laid out in Multiverse, the parallel between Moorcock's Law vs. Chaos and Wilson's Illuminati vs. Discordians is so obvious.

    The New Lou Review Lou Anders 2006

  • He would seem to be a perfect match for the dimension-skipping Doctor Who, since like the long-running BBC series, many of Moorcock's books are concerned with what he calls the 'Multiverse' - the idea of alternative realities which exist simultaneously.

    The First Post: Latest 2009

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.