A model of reality with no boundaries, no limits, no constraints—infinite in extent, infinite in possibility, infinite in complexity. In unlimited system reality, anything that can happen does happen, somewhere, sometime, somehow. This is the reality of the multiverse, of infinite possibility spaces, of the recognition that your actual life is just one slice of an infinite cake of potential lives. Unlimited system reality is exhilarating (anything is possible) and paralyzing (how do you choose anything when everything is possible?). It's the reality that makes decision-making difficult and regret irrational—there's always another branch where you made the other choice.
Example: "He faced a major life decision and froze, paralyzed by unlimited system reality. In one branch, he took the job and thrived. In another, he took it and failed. In another, he declined and found something better. In another, he declined and regretted it forever. All were real somewhere. How could he choose? His therapist said 'you can't live in unlimited reality; you have to pick one and live there.' He picked, and the others faded—but never completely."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
Get the Unlimited System Reality mug.A model of reality with clear boundaries, definite limits, and finite possibilities—the opposite of unlimited system reality. In bounded system reality, you have to make choices, accept constraints, and live with the consequences. This is the reality of everyday life—of deadlines, budgets, physical laws, and the fact that you can't be in two places at once. Bounded system reality is frustrating if you're an idealist and comforting if you're an overthinker. It's what makes decisions possible and regret inevitable. It's also where most people actually live, even if they dream of the unlimited version.
Example: "She dreamed of unlimited system reality—infinite time, infinite money, infinite possibilities. Then she remembered her rent was due, her boss expected her at 9, and she could only eat one lunch. Bounded system reality reasserted itself. The boundaries were annoying, but they also made choice possible. She paid her rent, went to work, ate her lunch. The infinite could wait."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
Get the Bounded System Reality mug.The principle that reality operates in two modes: absolute reality (the way things are independent of any observer) and relative reality (the way things appear from particular perspectives). The law acknowledges that there is a real world out there—rocks, trees, stars—but that our access to it is always mediated through perception, language, and culture. Absolute reality is what exists whether or not we're here to observe it; relative reality is what we experience, given our particular equipment and location. The law of absolute and relative reality reconciles realism with constructivism, acknowledging both that the world is real and that our knowledge of it is constructed.
Law of Absolute and Relative Reality Example: "They debated whether race was real. Absolute reality: there's no biological basis for race categories; they're human constructions. Relative reality: race is profoundly real in its social effects—it shapes lives, opportunities, experiences. The law of absolute and relative reality said: biologically constructed (not absolute), socially real (very relative). Both were right, which is why the debate is so charged."
by Abzugal February 16, 2026
Get the Law of Absolute and Relative Reality mug.The principle that reality exists on a spectrum between absolute and relative, with infinite gradations and multiple dimensions. Under this law, reality isn't simply one thing or many things—it's a multidimensional continuum where different aspects are more or less observer-dependent, more or less constructed, more or less universal. The law of spectral reality recognizes that the question "is it real?" is always incomplete—real in what sense? On what spectrum? To what degree? This law is the foundation of ontological humility, the recognition that reality is richer than any single account can capture, and that different accounts can be valid for different purposes.
Law of Spectral Reality Example: "She mapped her experience using spectral reality, placing different phenomena on spectra of observer-dependence, social construction, and materiality. Her toothache was high on materiality, low on construction. Her job title was the reverse. Her love for her partner was somewhere in between—real but constructed, material and immaterial. The spectral coordinates captured what simple realism missed: the texture of actually living."
by Abzugal February 16, 2026
Get the Law of Spectral Reality mug.The study of how humans construct, experience, and maintain their sense of what's real—and how this process is shaped by individual and collective psychology. Reality isn't simply given; it's built from sensory data, interpreted through concepts, stabilized by social agreement, and maintained against constant threats of doubt. The psychology of reality examines why different people experience different realities (schizophrenia, psychedelics, cultural variation), how shared reality is maintained (language, institutions, rituals), and what happens when reality breaks down (psychosis, anomie, existential crisis). It's the most fundamental psychology of all—the study of how we know anything at all.
Example: "After a psychedelic experience, she studied the psychology of reality to understand what had happened. Her ordinary sense of reality—stable, shared, certain—had dissolved, revealing it as a construction, not a given. The psychology taught her that reality is always constructed, always fragile, always maintained by collective agreement. She returned to ordinary life knowing it was a choice, not a prison."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Reality mug.The study of how societies construct and maintain shared reality—the taken-for-granted world that members of a society inhabit together. Reality is not simply given; it's built through language, interaction, and institutions, and maintained through constant social work. The sociology of reality examines how children are socialized into reality (learning what's real, what matters, what's possible), how reality is reinforced (through rituals, media, conversation), and how it can break down (through trauma, isolation, paradigm shifts). It also examines what happens when different realities collide—when cultures meet, when worldviews conflict, when people literally can't agree on what's happening. Reality is social; when society changes, reality changes with it.
Example: "He studied the sociology of reality after a psychedelic experience dissolved his ordinary world. He'd seen that reality wasn't fixed; it was constructed, maintained, shared. Returning to ordinary life, he saw the construction everywhere—in every conversation, every ritual, every unspoken agreement about what was real. He wasn't trapped; he was participating. That was the only way to be."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Sociology of Reality mug.