Tag Archives: reality

You’re an ‘Avatar in a VR Game,’ Scientist Claims—Meaning Reality Isn’t What It Seems

Popular Mechanics

Stav Dimitropoulos

Sun, May 31, 2026 (Yahoo.com)

A dark silhouette of a person standing against a vibrant explosion of neon light trails and digital patterns.
You Ignore ‘True Reality,’ Scientist ClaimsGetty Images


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Imagine slipping into a multiplayer VR version of Grand Theft Auto, racing cars against players scattered across the world. You see a red Corvette speeding beside you. You immediately grip the steering wheel of your matte-black Porsche 911, slam the virtual gas pedal, and tear through the glowing digital streets of Los Santos chasing after it. How dare the Corvette come for your crown? Now, if someone logically asked you, after taking off the headset, whether the rival car was true reality, you’d likely laugh and say no. You can grasp, even faintly, that what you experienced existed as millions of bits being toggled in precise sequences at blinding speed somewhere inside a supercomputer. There is no actual Corvette inside that machine. For Donald Hoffman, PhD, a cognitive scientist at the University of California, Irvine, this may be the best metaphor for reality itself. “We’re playing a multiplayer game,” he says. “My body is just an avatar in a VR game. It’s not the truth.”

In Hoffman’s “interface theory” of perception, evolution shaped us not to perceive objective reality directly, but to experience a simplified survival interface. Just as a VR game hides the incomprehensible complexity of the underlying code, Hoffman argues that space-time may function more like a navigational dashboard than objective reality itself. In such an interface, our senses evolved not to reveal the truth, but simply to help us play the game of life. And after a while, the game becomes so immersive that we lose ourselves inside it, thinking our avatars are all there is.

Hoffman arrived at the theory through an unusual reading of Darwinian evolution. If natural selection rewards survival rather than truth, he wondered, why assume humans evolved to perceive “raw” reality accurately at all? Then he turned to evolutionary game theory, which is a mathematical framework for modeling survival and competition.

In these mathematical models, organisms survive not by discovering objective truth, but by maximizing what scientists call “payoff functions,” which are strategies that increase the odds of survival and reproduction. A hungry lion chasing a gazelle, for example, receives a high evolutionary payoff. A hungry lion trying to eat a rock receives almost none, Hoffman says. Over time, evolution preserves the sensory systems associated with successful payoffs, not necessarily the ones that perceive reality accurately.

That realization led him to what he considers the theory’s most radical implication. Mathematically, Hoffman says, the question becomes whether the sensory shortcuts favored by evolution preserve the true structure of reality itself. Using evolutionary game theory models, he argues they do not. “What’s the probability that, you know, I see a rock because there really is a rock? I see the tree because there really is a tree?” he asks. “The answer is 0 percent. Exactly 0 percent.”

Natural selection, he says, never shaped organisms to perceive objective reality accurately, but simply to survive long enough to reproduce. It made us competent enough to navigate the world through simplified survival shortcuts—a user interface optimized for fitness rather than truth.

“Most of us think that means we’ve been shaped to see reality, because of course seeing reality would make you more fit,” Hoffman says. “And the answer is no. Period… When you do the math, the probability that seeing the truth will help you reproduce is zero.”

But if the body is merely an avatar inside the interface, where exactly is the “real” self, the consciousness? This is a question we shouldn’t even be asking, according to Hoffman. Because the true self is “nowhere in the game.”

“The very notion of being in the game is just wrong for who you really are,” Hoffman says. Questions like “Where am I? When am I?” assume that we are thinking in terms of space and time coordinates. But this returns us back into the VR headset—the trap of space-time itself. “Whatever you really are transcends the very notions of where and when,” he says. In other words, the very interface that allows us to navigate reality may also prevent us from perceiving what we truly are beyond it.

That idea, strange as it sounds, partially overlaps with a growing crisis in modern physics. Many high-energy physicists increasingly suspect that the fabric of space and time may not be fundamental reality after all. At the smallest scales of the universe—the Planck scale—the equations underlying modern physics appear to break down mathematically. This dilemma is pushing researchers to search for deeper structures beyond both conventional quantum theory and our ordinary understanding of the cosmos. Case in point: physicist John Wheeler of Princeton, who famously proposed “It from Bit,” the idea that physical reality may ultimately emerge from underlying information rather than matter itself.

“Space-time is doomed,” believes Hoffman. “It’s not just a cognitive scientist crying wolf about spacetime. The physicists themselves are saying we need to look beyond,” he continues. But if space-time is not fundamental reality, then what is?

Theoretical physicists have long struggled to reconcile quantum mechanics with gravity, and many of the equations of modern physics begin to break down at the Planck scale. So in 2013, some researchers began stepping outside of space-time itself. What they found were enormous geometric structures with strange properties—including giant diamond-shaped objects later dubbed amplituhedrons—that could predict particle interactions without relying on conventional notions of space and time at all.

These so-called “positive geometries” are exotic mathematical structures that attempt to derive the behavior of the physical universe directly from geometry itself rather than conventional space-time equations. They are the next clue outside of the space-time headset, Hoffman says. They may not yet represent the final truth, he quickly adds, but perhaps a crucial clue pointing toward it.

However, given the relatively young age of these “magical” structures in scientific research, Hoffman says: “Nobody yet knows what they really are.”

Still, the broader possibility that humans may not perceive reality directly is increasingly spreading to fields other than theoretical physics. Mona Sobhani, PhD—a cognitive neuroscientist and author who studies consciousness and anomalous experiences—says Hoffman’s theory at least aligns with one uncomfortable implication of evolution itself: Survival and truth may not be the same thing.

“Seems like a reasonable theory that is in line with the idea of evolution,” Sobhani says. “I think we are finding more scientists open to the idea, especially younger ones, although I’d say the mainstream explanations still sway toward the physicalist,” meaning theories that still treat matter and the physical universe as fundamental.

Critics are much more skeptical, however. While evolution may simplify perception, they argue, that doesn’t necessarily mean space-time itself is merely an interface or illusion. Some philosophers have also questioned whether Hoffman’s argument becomes self-defeating: If evolution shaped human cognition for survival rather than truth, why trust the conclusions produced by that cognition in the first place? A 2021 critique of Hoffman’s interface theory further argued that under more realistic environmental conditions, organisms disconnected from objective reality would actually be pushed closer to extinction rather than survival.

Still, such criticisms have not deterred a growing number of scientists from describing perception as a heavily filtered construction—a kind of shared hallucination even. Meanwhile, theorists such as Wheeler explored whether the physical world ultimately arises from deeper informational structures beneath space-time itself. Likewise, Stephen Wolfram, PhD, of the University of Illinois has argued that reality itself may emerge from hidden computational rules.

So, what if we ditched the headset altogether, directly dug into the deeper machinery of reality itself, and confronted the truth head-on?

“If you were smart enough, you could go into the supercomputer and toggle the millions of bits really, really quickly, and that would also be a way to play the game,” says Hoffman. Almost instantaneously, he circles back to evolution and what Darwinian payoffs have taught us, though not before wishing those who attempt it “good luck.”

For the interface of reality is essentially rigged against the searcher. Take Grand Theft Auto. The winner is rarely the player who stops to wonder why the Corvette is red, the Porsche black, or who designed Los Santos. The winner is the one who plays. For Hoffman, evolution clearly favors organisms that successfully navigate the game, not those that spend their time trying to understand the code running underneath it.

“Searchers will always lose to someone who can simply turn the steering wheel and hit the fake gas pedal inside the VR headset we call reality,” Hoffman says.

(Contributed by Janet Cornwell, H.W., m.)

Your Brain Restricts Full Access to Reality. But Scientists Found a Way to Turn Off the Filter.

Popular Mechanics

Stav Dimitropoulos

Sun, May 24, 2026 (Yahoo.com)

3d illustration of glowing digital human brain hologram on abstract futuristic background
Is There a Way to Turn Off Your Reality Filter?Getty Images


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In 1956, British psychiatrist Humphry Osmond coined the word “psychedelic” from Greek roots meaning “mind-manifesting” or “soul-revealing.” The term proved fitting. Users report that seconds stretch into eternity, sounds turn into color, and you very self begins dissolving. And now, after decades in scientific exile, those same once-ostracized compounds are undergoing a dramatic scientific renaissance. Researchers are investigating them not only for depression, trauma, and addiction, but also as a potential window into one of neuroscience’s deepest mysteries: how the brain constructs reality itself. And a small, egg-shaped structure buried deep in the center of the brain, the thalamus, may play an important role in that process.

Scientists once viewed the thalamus largely as a relay station: a kind of biological switchboard routing sensory information to the cortex, the brain’s outer layer responsible for higher thought, perception, and conscious awareness. But newer theories suggest something far stranger. Increasingly, neuroscientists suspect reality may partly reflect the brain’s constantly updated “best guess” about the world—built from memory, expectation, sensory input, and context, as Michelle J. Redinbaugh, PhD, a neuroscientist at Stanford University, puts it.

In a 2024 review published in Neuron, Redinbaugh and colleagues examined evidence from anesthesia, sleep, coma studies, perception experiments, and deep brain stimulation research to better understand the thalamus’s role in awareness. They came to a striking conclusion: The structure may help shape not only whether we are conscious, but also how awareness itself feels from moment to moment: unified, continuous, and stable—rather than fragmented into disconnected sensory pieces.

“… What you are seeing, hearing, smelling, what your internal state is like, how your body feels. All these sorts of things coalesce into consciousness,” Redinbaugh says. The thalamus sits in a loop between many cortical regions, continuously coordinating integrated information across the brain. Without that stabilizing process, she says, experience could feel fragmented “like a bunch of boxes.”

“You could call it a compression in terms of data science,” Redinbaugh says, describing how this small ovoid hub condenses massive amounts of sensory information into a continuous stream of awareness. The brain’s ordinary mode of operation constantly screens and constrains perception. Evolution likely favored such filtering because processing every detail of reality in full precision would be catastrophically inefficient. If allowed in, the gargantuan soup of sensory stimuli out there could overwhelm the brain’s ability to offer us a seamless sense of self, pushing the system toward total breakdown. And the brain chose speed over perfection—or variety.

Redinbaugh points to vision itself as an example: humans only see sharply in a tiny central region of the eye, while the brain reconstructs much of the periphery using assumptions and predictions. Evolution may have selected for that tradeoff because taking in every detail of the visual world in infinite detail would be mentally chaotic and energetically unsustainable. Without these shortcuts, reality itself could arrive as an unbearable sensory avalanche.

But the thalamic gatekeeping system does have its own weak spots. Anesthesia is one of them. Under it, thalamic activity shifts into disrupted “on/off” rhythms that may destabilize the coordinated neural activity supporting awareness, Redinbaugh says. The seamless experience we normally take for granted may begin to fracture in those moments.

Psychedelics are now exposing another crack in the system.

In a massive 2026 mega-analysis published in Nature Medicine, researchers analyzing brain scans across multiple psychedelic drugs found widespread shifts in communication across large-scale brain networks, including networks involving the thalamus. Brain systems that normally remain relatively segregated appeared to interact in unusual and sometimes intensified ways.

Though Redinbaugh stresses that neuroscience is still evolving, she admits it is reasonable to think hallucinogens alter the reciprocal relationship between higher brain networks and the thalamus. These drugs generally increase cortical excitability, which then feeds back into the deep-brain structure itself. One influential theory, she explains, is that psychedelics effectively make the brain’s normal “rules” more lenient.

“If you are now tweaking how the thalamus interacts with cortex, and cortex is more excitable, and you have kind of this loosening… suddenly you’re in a situation where you can no longer use the rules to constrain your perception,” she continues. “And then you’re also increasing this sort of bottom-up activity that is telling you what you’re seeing, so all of a sudden you see a lot of weird stuff, or you experience a lot of weird stuff.”

But what exactly is this “weird stuff” psychedelics seem capable of unleashing when they tamper with the brain’s reality-gating systems? For some, they may be aspects of perception normally hidden from conscious awareness. Could they be signs of “higher consciousness?”

Redinbaugh isn’t quite ready to call it that. “But it’s certainly a very different state of consciousness,” she adds.

Others are even more skeptical of the phrase “higher consciousness.”

“It implies a single scale, and it’s not clear what that scale would measure,” says Anne-Laure Le Cunff, PhD, a neuroscientist at King’s College London. Different forms of awareness, she argues, may involve different dimensions, like attention, memory, perception, wakefulness; they don’t exist on a simple ladder from lower to higher. Psychedelics may feel expansive or meaningful, she says, but “that doesn’t make them globally higher or more conscious.”

Part of that expansiveness may stem from the way altered states appear capable of distorting some of the brain’s most fundamental organizing systems such as time—processes in which the thalamus itself may play a central role, according to James M. Shine, PhD, a professor of systems neuroscience at the University of Sydney, who worked with Redinbaugh on the 2024 Neuron review.

One reason may be biochemical, he says. This integrative node and its cortical inputs are densely covered in 5-HT2A serotonin receptors, the primary receptors through which classic hallucinogenic drugs exert many of their effects. At the same time, Shine continues, the thalamus appears deeply involved in coordinating neural activity across radically different timescales, from the milliseconds required to perceive an image to massive state changes like the transition between wakefulness and sleep.

The implications quickly become existential. If the brain actively builds stable reality by orchestrating perception, time, and prediction, what happens if humans eventually learn to deliberately tweak those systems?

“Who is to say that this isn’t already the mechanism by which we learn to navigate our perceptual [subjective world] as our brains develop over our life spans?” Shine says. Of course, neuroscience doesn’t yet understand how awareness emerges from the brain. This does not deter Shine from saying that the developing brain may already provide natural examples of what scientists call “thalamocortical gain modulation,” though—suggesting that lived experience may leave lasting biological imprints on the neural machinery through which we experience the world.

For Redinbaugh, years spent studying consciousness seem to have left their own imprint on how she views the subject. As a young researcher, she once saw consciousness as uniquely human. Now, she says, it seems increasingly likely that animals such as rats possess their own vastly different forms of experience. Mammalian brains appear capable of generating rich subjective experience with remarkable energy efficiency, something even the world’s most advanced artificial intelligence systems still struggle to replicate, she says. And the deeper scientists probe consciousness, the more the question spills beyond neuroscience into ethics, medicine, and society itself, from animals to coma patients unable to communicate their awareness.

“Consciousness has a very important sociological role… How do we protect the most vulnerable among us who cannot easily explain that they’re conscious?” asks Redinbaugh.

“The more you learn about consciousness,” she says, “the more you really equate it with life, or what gives life value.”

(Contributed by Janet Cornwell, H.W., m.)

How We Render Reality: Attention as an Instrument of Love

By Maria Popova (themarginalian.org)

Whatever fundamental reality might exist, we live out our lives in a subjective reality defined by what we agree to attend to. “An act of pure attention, if you are capable of it, will bring its own answer,” D.H. Lawrence wrote. But we live largely in the territory of the unanswerable because there is no pure attention — the aperture of our attention is constricted by myriad conditionings and focused by a brain honed on millions of years of evolutionary necessities, many of which we have long outgrown.

How the brain metes out attention and what that means for our intimacy with reality is what the philosophy-lensed British psychiatrist Iain McGilchrist takes up in his immense, in both senses of the word, book The Matter With Things: Our Brains, Our Delusions and the Unmaking of the World (public library) — an investigation of how “the very brain mechanisms which succeed in simplifying the world so as to subject it to our control militate against a true understanding of it,” and what a richer understanding of those mechanisms can do for living in closer and more felicitous communion with reality. At its heart is the recognition that “the whole is never the same as the sum of its ‘parts’” and that “there are in fact no ‘parts’ as such, but that they are an artefact of a certain way of looking at the world.”

Art by the Brothers Hilts from A Velocity of Being: Letters to a Young Reader.

Punctuating his ambitious 3,000-page effort to braid neuropsychology (the way our brains shape our impression of reality), epistemology (the way we come to know anything at all), and metaphysics (our yearning to wrest meaning from fundamental truth as we try to discern the nature of the universe) is an ongoing inquiry into our way of looking at the world — the lens of consciousness we call attention. He writes:

The world we know cannot be wholly mind-independent, and it cannot be wholly mind-dependent… What is required is an attentive response to something real and other than ourselves, of which we have only inklings at first, but which comes more and more into being through our response to it — if we are truly responsive to it. We nurture it into being; or not. In this it has something of the structure of love.

This property of reality is what Iris Murdoch had in view when she observed that “love is the extremely difficult realisation that something other than oneself is real,” and what the poet J.D. McClatchy captured in his insistence that “love is the quality of attention we pay to things.”

One of artist Margaret C. Cook’s rare 1913 illustrations for Leaves of Grass — Walt Whitman’s supreme serenade to the art of paying attention. (Available as a print.)

McGilchrist considers the way our attention constructs our reality and becomes the beating heart with which we love the world:

The whole illuminates the parts as much as the parts can illuminate the whole… The world we experience — which is the only one we can know — is affected by the kind of attention we pay to it.

Defining attention as “the manner in which our consciousness is disposed towards whatever else exists,” he writes:

The choice we make of how we dispose our consciousness is the ultimate creative act: it renders the world what it is. It is, therefore, a moral act: it has consequences.

A century-some after William James insisted that our experience is what we agree to attend to, and two generations after Simone Weil asserted that “attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity,” McGilchrist adds:

Attention changes the world. How you attend to it changes what it is you find there. What you find then governs the kind of attention you will think it appropriate to pay in the future. And so it is that the world you recognise (which will not be exactly the same as my world) is “firmed up” — and brought into being.

[…]

Attention is not just another “cognitive function”: it is… the disposition adopted by one’s consciousness towards the world. Absent, present, detached, engaged, alienated, empathic, broad or narrow, sustained or piecemeal, it therefore has the power to alter whatever it meets. Since our consciousness plays some part in what comes into being, the play of attention can both create and destroy, but it never leaves its object unchanged. So how you attend to something — or don’t attend to it — matters a very great deal.

In the vast remainder of The Matter With Things, McGilchrist goes on to explore how “the type, and extent, of attention we pay changes the nature of the world that we experience,” shaped largely by the difference between the way the brain’s two hemispheres pay attention — “narrow-beam, highly focussed attention” in the left, “broad, sustained vigilance” in the right. Complement this tiny fragment of it with Mary Oliver on attention and love, then revisit cognitive scientist Alexandra Horowitz’s wonderful field guide to eleven ways of paying attention to the everyday wonderland of life.