THE GLITCHES OF REALITY PART IV: REALITY AS EXPERIMENT
The universe is watching you. And it's been running tests.
Part IV of The Glitches of Reality series reveals the most disturbing possibility yet: you're not just living in reality. You're a subject in a cosmic experiment studying consciousness and quantum mechanics.
Why does looking at a particle change its behavior? Why are physical constants tuned to one part in 10 60-precision so impossible it can't be luck? Why do billions of planets exist but we see no aliens? Why does the future affect the past in quantum experiments?
These aren't mysteries. They're experimental protocols.
Quantum superposition keeps reality as probability until you observe it. Wave function collapse records data when you measure. Entanglement connects everything instantly across space. Fine-tuned constants create precise conditions for observers. The Fermi Paradox isolates test subjects. Retrocausality lets future observations determine past states.
Every strange feature of physics makes sense as deliberate design for studying how consciousness interacts with quantum reality.
This book presents evidence from actual experiments. The double-slit test proving observation changes outcomes. Bell's theorem confirming instant connections across space. Wheeler's delayed-choice experiments where your measurement today determines what happened billions of years ago. Constants calibrated with absurd precision. An empty universe despite high probability of alien life.
The patterns are undeniable once you see them. Reality doesn't act random. It acts designed. Structured. Optimized for data collection about consciousness and observation.
You're inside the laboratory. Every observation you make collapses quantum probability into classical reality. Every measurement affects outcomes. You're not discovering a pre-existing world. You're creating it through observation.
Who's running the experiment? What are they testing? And what happens when subjects figure out they're being studied?
Part IV explores these questions using physics, not philosophy. The glitch isn't that reality seems like an experiment. The glitch is that we took so long to notice.