A GPS satellite 20,000 kilometers above your head is aging more slowly than you are. Its atomic clocks drift by microseconds each day compared to those on Earth-tiny differences that your phone constantly corrects so navigation stays precise. This isn't science fiction; it's everyday engineering shaped by relativity.
But what would the universe look like from the satellite's point of view? What would it feel like to exist in a frame where time itself flows differently?
This book takes you inside such perspectives. You'll ride with a cosmic ray at nearly light speed, watch the universe shrink around you, inhabit a photon in quantum superposition, and fall across the horizon of a black hole. These aren't metaphors-they're grounded in real physics, the same principles powering GPS, quantum computers, and gravitational wave detectors.
By shifting perspective-from the human view to the view of the phenomena themselves-the strangeness of modern physics becomes natural. Relativity isn't bizarre when you're the one moving at near-light speed. Quantum superposition isn't mysterious when you are the quantum system. Spacetime curvature isn't abstract when you're falling through it.
The universe isn't strange because it defies reason; it feels strange because our intuition evolved for walking speeds and everyday gravity. This book shows how physics looks when freed from those limits-revealing not a chaotic cosmos, but a coherent reality far richer than common sense suggests.
Welcome to the view from everywhere.
Cor P.M. van Houte