The One-Electron Universe and Open Individualism: What if everyone alive is actually you?
EXPLORE CONTENT →Max Tegmark's experiment: Can consciousness never experience its own end?
EXPLORE CONTENT →Universes branching with every decision and intersecting timelines.
EXPLORE CONTENT →Monitor vs. Hard Disk distinction. Why don't we have infinite memory?
EXPLORE CONTENT →Holonomic Brain and Quantum Consciousness (Penrose): The physical explanation of the soul.
EXPLORE CONTENT →Cosmic Gear and Servitude: Are we merely the universe's graphics card?
EXPLORE CONTENT →The horrifying truth of cosmic statistics: Could you be a hallucination, spontaneously existing in a vacuum, rather than a real universe?
EXPLORE CONTENT →"If our mind is just a monitor reading data, where is that data stored?"
PROCEED TO CHAPTER 4: SIMULATION →In the spring of 1940, physicist John Wheeler called his student Richard Feynman and claimed to have solved one of physics' greatest mysteries: "I know why all electrons have the same mass and the same electrical charge! Because there is actually only one electron in the universe."
According to Wheeler's theory, this "One Electron" was traveling back and forth through space-time so rapidly that our three-dimensional perception saw this single point as trillions of different electrons in trillions of different places simultaneously. What we call antimatter (a positron) was nothing but an ordinary electron traveling backward in time. The entire universe was a single wave function ($|\Psi_{universe}\rangle$) folded in on itself.
But what if this rule applies not only to electrons but also to Consciousness? This unsettling approach, known in philosophy as "Open Individualism," suggests that there are not billions of different minds in the universe, but only "one universal consciousness." If the flow of time (A-theory) is not universal but merely a psychological illusion created by the observer, then consciousness does not move through time; it is simply a static lantern illuminating different coordinates.
According to this theory; that stranger passing you in life is actually you, reincarnated in a different time. Your enemy with whom you argue is also you, and the person you love is also you. You committed all the murders in history, and you were all the victims. Your identity (Ego) and your name are a temporary "amnesia" filter applied to your consciousness by the universal simulation to allow you to play only that particular episode.
Observing Schrödinger's Cat experiment from outside the box is a philosophical debate. But what if you are inside the box? In 1997, astrophysicist Max Tegmark devised a chilling thought experiment to test the Many-Worlds Interpretation: Quantum Suicide (Quantum Russian Roulette).
Imagine holding a gun to your head, whose trigger is linked to the spin direction of a quantum particle. If the particle spins up, the gun fires, and you die instantly; if it spins down, you only hear a "click." According to quantum mechanics, every time you pull the trigger, the universe splits ($|\Psi\rangle \rightarrow \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}|\text{Alive}\rangle + \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}|\text{Dead}\rangle$): In one universe, you die; in the other, you live.
However, here's where the paradox comes in: You cannot experience nothingness. Consciousness can only be aware of something in the universes where it exists. For an outside observer, your chances of survival rapidly approach zero with the formula $P = (\frac{1}{2})^n$ ($P \rightarrow 0$), but within your own subjective reference frame (subjective perspective), this probability is always $1$. Even if you pull the trigger 100 times in a row, the outside world will hold your funeral. But for you, your consciousness must flow each time into that incredibly low-probability universe where the gun only "clicks."
The gun jams, the bullet gets stuck, or the particle randomly keeps spinning "down." Whatever event would kill you (accident, illness, old age), your consciousness must cling to that micro-branch of the wave function where it 'survived' and continue its journey. According to this philosophy, death is real only for those who observe us from the outside. We are immortal prisoners within our own subjective universes.
The standard Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics states that when an observation is made, the wave function "collapses" randomly, and the universe chooses only one of the possibilities. However, in 1957, young physicist Hugh Everett emerged and asked a groundbreaking question that shook the foundations of physics: "What if the universe doesn't roll the dice and pick one possibility? What if the universe says 'Yes' to all possibilities simultaneously?"
According to Everett's Many-Worlds Interpretation, the universal wave function never collapses; it merely branches. Every event that occurs at the quantum level (and therefore at the macro level) causes the universe to branch into new, orthogonal realities within Hilbert space (an infinite-dimensional mathematical space).
Yesterday morning you decided to turn down the other road instead of this one. At that exact second, the universe forked. Another "you" in another universe took the other road. The answers to all the "What if I had done this?" questions you've asked throughout your life are colossal and rigid realities within mathematics. They are all being lived right now, on different timelines.
Why can't we see the other worlds? Physics' answer to this is Quantum Decoherence. From a billionth of a second after they diverge, branching universes lose their phase coherence with each other. Like radio frequencies disconnecting, timelines lock together forever, never to intersect again.
According to this interpretation, you don't "make choices." Your mind is merely a recording device doomed to perceive the journey of just one of trillions of copies within this colossal branching tree. That terrifying scenario you fear? It's being lived out by another version of you right now.
Most of us define our identity through our memories. However, this may be a neurological delusion. If all your memories were erased while you slept last night, but you woke up this morning with the same awareness, would that person you woke up as still be "you"? The difference between Consciousness and Memory is like the difference between a Monitor and a Hard Disk in a computer system.
The hard disk (Memory) is a physical storage area where data is recorded, biologically destined to decay. The monitor (Consciousness) is merely the light that displays, illuminates that data in the "present moment." Whether you watch a war movie or a romantic comedy on the monitor, the monitor "itself" is not affected.
According to the Integrated Information Theory (IIT) developed by neuroscientist Giulio Tononi, the amount of consciousness in a system is measured by a mathematical value called "$\Phi$" (Phi). Consciousness is not merely information sitting side by side on a disk, but rather information inextricably interwoven (integrated) within the system. A camera's sensor records trillions of pixels but does not "see"; the brain, however, integrates this data and "experiences red" (Qualia).
There is no difference between the inner "Observer" who saw the world when you were 5 years old and the "Observer" reading this text now; that pure awareness never ages or changes. The only thing that changes are the new traumas written onto your bodily hard disk and the decaying neurons. You are not your memories; you are the unwavering light through which those memories pass.
For decades, the scientific world has sought an answer to this question: How can a mechanical structure made of flesh and bone (carbon and water) transform into a subject (Qualia) that can say "I," fall in love, and fear death? Traditional neurology views the brain merely as a complex computer. But this is like trying to understand a movie's plot by counting the pixels on the screen.
The renowned mathematician Sir Roger Penrose and anesthesiologist Stuart Hameroff provided a startling answer to this problem with their Orch-OR (Orchestrated Objective Reduction) theory: Consciousness is not a chemical smoke "produced" by the brain; the brain is a massive radio (receiver) that pulls quantum information from the fundamental fabric of the universe.
Within neurons are nano-tubes called "microtubules." According to Penrose, the inside of these tubes functions like a quantum computer, isolated from the external environment, independent of neuronal firings. The moment of "wakefulness" we call consciousness arises at the second when the microtubules in our brain align with the universe's most fundamental quantum gravitational geometry ($E_G \approx \hbar / \tau$) and experience an instantaneous collapse.
Accordingly, the "Soul" is not a magical essence produced by our brain; it is mathematical data resonating with the Planck Scale at the lowest layer of the universe. When we die (when our heart stops), the quantum coherence in these microtubules is disrupted, and the quantum information in our body (our consciousness) does not vanish; it merely disperses back into the general quantum field of the universe (space-time).
Is the universe a massive, dead Cosmic Clock, established with the Big Bang and since then turning solely at the command of blind physical laws? Classical determinism argues that we are insignificant "biological servants" who arrived too late on the cosmic stage.
However, the legendary physicist John Archibald Wheeler's "Participatory Universe" (It from Bit) theory and Robert Lanza's Biosentrism completely reverse this: Life and consciousness are not random byproducts of the universe; the universe physically "needs" consciousness to exist. Without the observer effect in quantum mechanics (Wave Function Collapse), probabilities cannot solidify into matter. The quantum equation ($|\psi\rangle$) only gains meaning when there is a conscious 'reader' observing it from outside (Von Neumann chain).
If a tree falls in a forest and there is no consciousness to hear it, has the tree fallen? Quantum mechanics unequivocally says "No." We are not insignificant inhabitants of the universe; we are the biological processors that the universe uses to observe itself and "render" its reality.
Welcome to one of physics' darkest and most existentially unsettling concepts. This idea, born from Austrian physicist Ludwig Boltzmann's work on thermodynamics and entropy, puts a more terrifying possibility on the table than even the universe being a simulation.
According to quantum mechanics, the vacuum of space is never truly empty; energy fluctuations and virtual particles constantly appear and disappear (Casimir Effect). In an infinite universe and over an infinite span of time, the probability of these random thermal and quantum fluctuations momentarily coalescing to form specific structures is not zero.
Here's where the terrifying statistic comes in: The probability of random quantum fluctuations genuinely creating; a 14-billion-year-long massive evolution, billions of galaxies, and Trillions of stars from scratch with a big bang (a 1 in $10^{10^{123}}$ chance) is so incredibly low mathematically; that the probability of a single brain with only your current fake memories spontaneously forming in the middle of nothingness for a microsecond is almost a certainty by comparison.
What if these lines you're reading right now, the chair you're sitting in, your childhood memories, and that entire reality you call "you"... are merely the last momentary hallucination of a "Boltzmann Brain" that just happened to coalesce by quantum fluctuations in the emptiness of deep space, before it dissipates and vanishes?