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Theory of Secret Reality

The metaphysical proposition that the world we perceive is not the real world—that there's a hidden reality beneath or behind the surface, accessible only to those who know how to look. This theory underpins everything from Plato's cave to Matrix movies to your cousin's belief that lizard people run the government. The theory of secret reality is comforting because it explains why the world seems so messed up: it's not that things are chaotic and meaningless; it's that there's a hidden order, a secret truth, a reality behind reality. The downside is that once you start believing in secret reality, every mundane event becomes suspicious, and you can never just enjoy a sunset without wondering if it's a hologram.
Example: "After watching three documentaries, he became a believer in the theory of secret reality. The moon landing was fake, the earth was flat, and birds weren't real—they were government drones. His friends asked about the birds they saw at the park. He said those were the realistic ones. The secret reality was exhausting, but at least it was interesting."
by Dumu The Void February 15, 2026
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Spectral Law of Reality

The principle that reality itself exists on a spectrum—not a single, fixed, objective reality but an infinite continuum of realities, from the brute physical (rocks, trees) through the socially constructed (money, borders) to the purely subjective (pain, love) to the transcendent (God, meaning). The spectral law of reality acknowledges that what's real in one dimension may be illusory in another, that reality is layered and multiple, and that the question "is it real?" is always incomplete—real in what sense? On what spectrum? By whose standards? This law is the foundation of humility, because it recognizes that your reality is just one slice of an infinite spectral cake.
Example: "He said her feelings weren't 'real' because they weren't based on facts. She invoked the spectral law of reality: 'Feelings are real on the subjective-experience spectrum. They're not real on the objective-fact spectrum. Different spectra, different realities. Your feelings about my feelings are also real—on the spectrum of your own experience.' He had no response, because his frustration was real on every spectrum."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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Open System Reality

A model of reality in which the system is open to outside influences—new information, new forces, new possibilities that aren't determined by the system's initial conditions. In open system reality, the future isn't fixed; the universe isn't closed; things can genuinely surprise you. This is the reality of creativity, of learning, of love at first sight, of the phone call that changes everything. Open system reality is scary because it means you're not in control, but it's also hopeful because it means change is possible. It's the reality that keeps therapists in business and makes life worth living.
Example: "He tried to predict his life trajectory using past data, but open system reality kept intervening—a random meeting, an unexpected opportunity, a global pandemic. His models failed because reality was open, not closed. He finally accepted that prediction was impossible and started paying attention instead. Open system reality had taught him humility, which was not in any model."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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Closed System Reality

A model of reality in which the system is closed to outside influenceseverything that happens is determined by initial conditions and internal dynamics, with no room for true novelty or external intervention. This is the reality of classical physics, of strict determinism, of the feeling that your life was over before it started. Closed system reality is comforting if you like certainty and terrifying if you like freedom. It's the reality of people who say "everything happens for a reason" (the reason being initial conditions plus deterministic laws) and of those who believe the future is already written.
Example: "She lived in closed system reality, believing her fate was sealed by childhood experiences, genetic inheritance, and social position. When something good happened, she called it 'inevitable.' When something bad happened, she called it 'predestined.' Therapy was hard because she believed the outcome was already determined. Her therapist preferred open systems."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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A model of reality in which systems are both dynamic (constantly changing) and complex (with interacting components producing emergent behavior). This is the reality of ecosystems, economies, organizations, and human relationships—systems where causes loop back on themselves, where small changes can have huge effects, where prediction is impossible but understanding is still possible. Dynamic-complex system reality is the default mode of existence; it's just that most people try to pretend they're living in something simpler. This reality is why best-laid plans often fail and why life is endlessly surprising.
Example: "He planned his career like a linear path—step A to step B to step C. Dynamic-complex system reality laughed. The economy shifted, his industry transformed, his interests evolved, and his personal life intervened. The path became a web, then a cloud, then a mystery. He finally accepted that he wasn't navigating a linear path but a dynamic-complex system, which required different skills—adaptability, patience, and a sense of humor."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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Fluid System Reality

A model of reality in which systems are not just dynamic and complex but fluid—constantly reshaping themselves, with boundaries that flow, categories that dissolve, and identities that transform. In fluid system reality, nothing stays the same long enough to be fixed; everything is process, flow, becoming. This is the reality of postmodern philosophy, of Heraclitus's river, of the recognition that you can't step into the same reality twice because it's always changing and so are you. Fluid system reality is liberating if you like freedom and disorienting if you like stability.
Example: "She tried to define herself—her values, her identity, her goals. Fluid system reality said no. Every time she thought she'd pinned herself down, she'd already flowed somewhere else. The self she defined yesterday wasn't the self she was today. She stopped defining and started flowing, which was terrifying and liberating in equal measure. Her friends found her exhausting; she found herself fascinating."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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Gaseous System Reality

A model of reality so diffuse, so unconstrained, so free-floating that it barely qualifies as a system at all—yet somehow still contains everything. In gaseous system reality, boundaries are meaningless, categories are approximations, and everything interpenetrates everything else. This is the reality of quantum fields, of mystical experience, of the feeling that you're connected to everything and nothing simultaneously. Gaseous system reality is where mystics live and where scientists go when they've had too much coffee. It's impossible to navigate but wonderful to contemplate.
Example: "After a particularly intense meditation session, he experienced gaseous system reality. His boundaries dissolved; he felt connected to everything; his sense of self expanded to fill the universe. Then he had to go grocery shopping, which required a much more bounded reality. The transition was jarring. He bought milk while still feeling vaguely cosmic, which is a very strange way to shop."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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