Mechanics is the original discipline of physics, dealing with the macroscopic world that humans perceive.
The style is named after micrographs for its highly detailed, worm's eye or microscopic view of the macroscopic world.
This process cannot be directly perceived, but much of its understanding is shaped by the macroscopic world, which classical mechanics can not adequately explain.
One finds that these results do not obey the laws of classical mechanics, which work so well in our macroscopic world.
As the microscopic world was expanding, the macroscopic world was shrinking.
Our macroscopic world is precise; it is the domain of classical Newtonian physics.
Due to overpopulation on these worlds, the character decides that the macroscopic world will be an ideal new base.
Most bets now are being laid on a different possibility: that it is simply the interaction with an environment that solidifies the macroscopic world.
Finally, this chapter thoroughly addresses the important subject of decoherence and its relevance towards the macroscopic world.