The phenomenon of quantum entanglement reveals a nonlocal correlation that transcends spacetime: once two particles are entangled, measuring one instantly affects the other, regardless of the distance between them. If we push this property to its logical extreme—imagine an entangled pair traversing every corner of the universe—then such instantaneous correlations could exist between any two points in the cosmos. From this we can derive a fundamental first principle: information transmission between any two points in the universe can be achieved with zero latency (instantaneously). This principle is not an arbitrary postulate but a necessary conclusion derived from established physical laws. Taking this as a starting point, we construct the "Instantaneous Teleportation Cosmos (ITC)" framework, deduce the existence of a basal structure and its four fundamental properties, and thereby obtain a model of coexisting multiple worlds: "One Basal, Many Manifestations." The same basal structure can simultaneously project many different worlds; they coexist on the same basal level but are mutually invisible due to different projection rules. By bringing this model into dialogue with the Buddhist cosmology of the "trichiliocosm" (thousandfold world system), we reinterpret Mount Meru—not as the basal structure itself, nor as a distant sacred mountain, but as another projected world coexisting with ours on the same basal level, right here and now, yet invisible because of differing projection rules. Karma determines which projected world beings enter, while the power of the Buddha can penetrate all worlds. Quantum entanglement may be the first clue on the path to this sacred mountain.
Lei Ding (Sat,) studied this question.