fanieh said:
If the writer can make use of the concept of "other dimensions of the multiverse".. maybe he has also think of Many Worlds..
"multiverse" in this context usually just means "parallel universes" in the sense of different realities that exist alongside our own and require some special gateway to get to. In "many worlds" there is only one world that can be experienced at a time. Getting to another one involves time travel totally erasing the previous one ... that does not happen in Dr Strange. (It does happen, sort of, in DC Universe with the Flash - but the approach there is more general relativity than quantum mechanics.)
I don't think the movie has shown us any "parallel world" which could not be part of this Universe accessed by teleportation as when Strange gets stranded on Mt Everest in his training... possible exception of the mirror world but I don't know enough of the rules to work that out. It seems more like a pocket universe - so the rules of this universe are bent around the sorcerer and anyone else in that pocket - the view is a distorted view of this universe through the mirror interface.
You could think of that as "seeing two universes at once" - but then, you'd have to say that someone traveling close to the speed of light, seeing the regular universe of stars etc all length contracted and time dilated, is also seeing two universes at once.
Even if you adopt that language - you still cannot explain how that means you can do magic.
The movie description quoted uses "energy" in the mystical/metaphorical sense... so useless babble not referencing anything scientific.
It does not have to: it is fantasy, not science fiction. The movie is not taking the "magic is super-advanced technology" approach here.
Don't get me wrong - you could take that approach as the viewer and just say that magic is an emergent behavior of the super-tech being, therefore, described understood in mystical terms... but then the entire description has to be taken in that light and, once more, "many worlds" is out the window with everything else.
Note: the movie contains doors that can be permanent portals to other locations ... sometimes with very different climates.
Imagine opening one door to hot desert and the one next to it to an iceworld ... leave both doors open and put a windmill between them.
Now you are "harnessing energy from different dimensions" in the strict physics sense. See the difference?
But just asking if the writer depictions of the shifting building shapes is because he wants to convey the message that sorcerers can see other dimensions of the multiverse at the same time.. that's why the shifting building is invisible to normal people on the street (in the movie).
I understand.
The only way to get a definitive answer to that question is to ask the writers.
However, if they said "yes, that's what we were trying to convey", then they would be getting "many worlds" wrong.
They would also be getting the marvel Universe take on parallel universes wrong... so that would be against canon.
Like I said: look up "infinity gauntlet" - especially the infinity stone bits ... also see the "eXcalibre: cross time caper" series.