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 Originally Posted by bikes
Also is there an alternate universe in which I am currently banging Alison Brie?
Physics answer: Not my problem.
Physics deals with observables, and any alternate universe, by definition, is unobservable. As the universe is anything which has been observed, and an alternate to being observed is NOT being observed.
Non-physics answer: In an infinite multiverse, anything is possible.
 Originally Posted by bikes
Also will the universe Big Crunch and then Big Bang the same way on to infinitude and as such have we lived this life an infinite amount of times and will live it again an infinite amount of times?
Physics answer: still collecting data
The current evidence for the existences of dark matter and dark energy is astounding. These terms are blanket terms used to describe matter and energy which have a visible affect on the structure of the universe, but have not been directly detected yet. In short, we know that we don't know what 90% of the universe is made up of, so speculating on long term evolution involves a huge number of assumptions. It may become good science, but it's not good science yet.
Non-physics answer:
As for a repeating universe that keeps happening over and over... well I think I can safely speculate that the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle will prevent duplications. Of course, I'm now speculating what happens when the laws of physics break down into a singularity and then reform in expansion... so no science there.
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