Well, you're sort of mixing two somewhat different things here. In General Relativity, there are no separate paths, there is just one universe. In GR, if you perfectly knew the state of the universe at one time, you could in principle calculate the state of the universe forever before or after that time.
In quantum mechanics, this doesn't really change a whole lot, except that specifying the entire state of the universe requires specifying the entire wavefunction of the universe at a given time (as opposed to just the positions, masses, and velocities of every particle in the universe in GR). This wavefunction includes an infinite number of classical worlds.
One thing to note here is that as I stated earlier, there is no global now, so the statement "at a given time" should be taken to mean that you define a three-dimensional slice through the universe, and call that your "reference time", computing everything based upon it. Typically we choose such slices to accord with the way we experience time.