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Thread: I'm writing a book with a multiverse, need help with naming conventions!

  1. #1

    Default I'm writing a book with a multiverse, need help with naming conventions!

    Hello,

    I hope I've come to the right place. I'm writing a science fiction novel in which the protagonist's earth gets invaded by a parallel universe. I need help figuring out how to name the different universes in a way that fits with the physics of traveling between multiverses.

    So, there is no infinite expanding in all directions multiverse. The multiverse is actually quite strange, acting in many ways similar to the quantum mechanics idea that individual particles don't actually exist in reality, but rather exist as a wavefunction, as a probability spread out over spacetime, with a higher probability of existence in some places and much lower in others. That means that we should think of the multiverse as something with a certain structure that is constraining and guiding the existence of this infinite number of parallel universes. If you know of chaos theory, then think strange attractors. I tend to visualize it as a tree or a river, the trunk of which are a vast majority of universes almost exactly like ours- same physical laws, same universe structure, same planet. There are of course, an infinite number of universes, but the majority of them, 80-90% seem to have diverged from each other based on some "recent" period of human history. (which implies that consciousness, or choice, plays a role in creating multiverses) Of that percent of universes, around 40 percent of that is controlled by a mercantile conglomerate that is basically franchising a repressive and controlling across the multiverse as fast as they possibly can, and they are the ones who'd be creating the naming conventions I'd be using. They tend to be elitists- differentiating between the large number of trunk worlds similar to their own and all the other universes, who of course are seen as barbarians.

    The more alike a universe is to another, the "closer" it is, and thus the easier it is to travel to and between. There's also some evidence that while universes can diverge, appear, and even disappear, they can actually merge- if two multiverses becomes too similar they can merge. The universes this happens to don't notice any changes, it's as if the spacetimes were completely rewired to have always been a single, unified whole, but those outside the universe can observe the changes. One doesn't travel have to universes linearly, one after another, but if one wants to skip universes, jump to ones that are more dissimilar, "further" away, it takes prohibitively more energy. Outside of the trunk, the universes are not only more dissimilar, but more unstable, popping in and out of existence at random, sometimes existing for months, years, decades, sometimes days or hours. It is uncertain if these universes are completely erased from existence or if they simply become inaccessible. If ones lover were to travel to one of these universes, and it popped out of existence while they were there, it's entirely possible that another extremely similar universe could also pop into existence at a very similar frequency and contain a verrrry similar person who had just left their lover as well. In this multiverse, the trunk is populated by a large and rapidly growing despotic mercantilist conglomerate that is invading and "civilizing" the universes that aren't in the trunk. There are six factions within the conglomerate, and they are all ravenous for new territory. They all have specialist departments exploring the multiverse, pushing further and deeper into it away from the multi-civilization. The trunk is mostly a known quantity, but there are branches, spindly paths through the quantum multiverse fluctuations that lead far away from the sphere of conglomerate controlled space. On one of those branches, far, far away, separated by a string of desert worlds, of ruined, destroyed, and unstable universes, lies a lonely island of stability: our Earth.

    So here's what I am struggling with.
    1. Naming conventions. So far I'm thinking "core" and "edge" worlds as a common slang characters use to describe trunk vs branch universes. But the actual specific naming conventions I'm drawing a blank for. Specifically, I'm not sure what criteria to include as part of a universes' identifier. I figure I'd have to do something like C-137 Rick and Morty, but what should the numbers/letters stand for? Right now I'm considering a number string to indicate the frequency to access that multiverse, maybe use a letter for where a universe falls on the core vs edge worlds in terms of their stability or risk of popping out of existence. I need to create a naming convention such that two people from two different universes would arrive at the same name for a universe they separately spotted.
    2. Slang words and phrases for the different worlds and people. There are a core of 6 original planets that started the evil conglomerate, they have the most power. They bully the edge world planets and people for being technologically behind, but the truth is they are simply further from the centers of commerce. I also need a name for our earth, easy to differentiate from other multiverse earths. I don't like the idea of earth "prime". I am toying with calling our earth "quantum earth" as this earth is the only one to have developed quantum mechanics.

  2. #2
    Guild Master Chashio's Avatar
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    Interesting concepts. Sounds like you're on the right track. I don't have any specific feedback, but wanted to point out there's a whole sub-forum devoted to toponymy and linguistics that you might also find something useful in... https://www.cartographersguild.com/f...splay.php?f=67

  3. #3

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    Your descriptions leaning on chaos theory and quantum mechanics gave me a few ideas.

    First, deterministic chaos means that slightly different initial conditions produce different results -- so why not use the initial conditions as the designator for each universe? I'd start looking at ways to encode coordinates. Something like (x,y,z) is going to produce cumbersome names and you'd have to go out to a ridiculous number of significant digits, but there are other conventions like representing an RGB triple in hex or the astronomy RA,Dec. Some kind of riff on them could be neat, and you could abbreviate the coordinates when there are only a few universes under discussion. But it almost sounds like a more important item is some kind of distance metric for the degree of separation between universes -- maybe where it's <<1 they are close to combining, and when they are >10 or >100 they are extremely well-separated. For that metric, I'd come up with a compound unit that is distance-y but add in something energy-related for the quantum aspect. (As an example, in my con- universe the rating for warp drive capability comes in TqV -- teraquark-volts, tera- to imply large and quark-volts in analogy to the unit of energy electron-volts.)

    For specific universe names, I like that you brought up the term "strange attractor." What about coming up with various two-word descriptors inspired or drawn from chaos theory? This universe is the Pendulum Attractor, this one is the Quantum Bifurcation, etc.? For the Core worlds, based on what you've described of them, they are obviously going to pick words like "core," "prime," and so on. For the name of our world, I guess the first question is, whose culture names it?

  4. #4

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    From what you're describing, this isn't so much physics as fantasy with physics-inspired names. Which is great, because it frees you up to go in whatever direction you want for naming!

    For different worlds you could say they had different "topology" or "cohomology" two math-y terms to describe how a world might look.

    I quantum mechanics of 2D spaces people talk about "windings", which refer to how many times a particle has been wound around another particle as a way to distinguish them, you could adapt that describe how many times a universe has wound around another universe

    Otherwise I think assigning alpha-numeric characters to universes would be a good way to go, possibly complemented by characters giving common ones nicknames - so like Universe a3f57p gets called "ferns" because instead of woody trees evolving ferns just got bigger and bigger.

    Sounds interesting, and good luck!

  5. #5

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    If you haven't already, you might consider looking at the (quite old) Paratime Police stories written by H. Beam Piper. His naming convention was to use the name (often made up) of the civilization which formed the "root" of that particular branch of universes.
    Selden

  6. #6

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    Tanker Books/Novels are an absolute treasure trove for any book lover. They offer a captivating selection of narratives that transport you to different worlds and immerse you in compelling stories.

  7. #7

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    You can always go Tolkienite and invent a new word, right? That's what I would do if I was in your shoes.

    If you don't think so, remember Sol is the name of Earth's solar system. Conventional as of science yet still, own words.

  8. #8

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    Perhaps you could lean into the trunk of a tree concept, by having the difeerentiation being a species of tree that exists only on one of each of the six worlds leading your conglomerate?

    Or maybe a different name for the same species? So maybe on one world Giant Seqouia's are called "High Tops", on another they are called "Redwood", on another they are called "Smooth Trunk", on another they are called "Small Cone"...

    Just an example, and picking better names would be good, but maybe it's one way of diferentiating? And then of course, it becomes the convention to refer to the G6 worlds by their "Tree Name"

    Then other worlds could be their tree name with a number indicating the order that G6 world "colonised" them.

    Then, Earth. If you are positing it is NOT colonised, they could name it in their system, but the Earthlings could reject this and call themselves by something entirely different, Like Solarians...

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