SIMULATION THEORY
The simulation hypothesis has moved from philosophy to serious academic discourse. Bostrom's trilemma argues that at least one of these must be true: civilizations go extinct before simulating, they choose not to simulate, or we are almost certainly in a simulation. The fine-tuning of physical constants suggests parameters set by design. The holographic principle in physics implies our 3D reality is a projection from a 2D surface. Planck-scale discreteness hints at the pixelation of spacetime. Cellular automata demonstrate how complex behavior emerges from simple rules. And quantum observer effect suggests reality doesn't collapse into definite states until something measures it. The case for simulation isn't fringe anymore — it's the simplest explanation for why our universe looks engineered.
Lethometry is an independent research archive investigating the anomalies, gaps, and patterns that mainstream discourse ignores. This section contains every investigation published on the site, organized by category. Each article examines primary sources, academic research, and declassified materials to build cases that challenge conventional narratives. The simulation hypothesis serves as the unifying framework across categories — the question of whether we live in a constructed reality isn't fringe physics anymore, it's the simplest explanation for why our universe looks engineered at every scale, from the Planck length to the cosmic microwave background. Explore the investigations below, follow internal links to trace connections between pieces, or use the navigation to drill into specific categories.
The Double-Slit Experiment in 2026: Quantum Mechanics as the Simulation Compression Algorithm
Quantum mechanics has been the simulation hypothesis's most stubborn problem and its most powerful evidence since 1927. The double-slit experiment keeps getting more suggestive. The latest results from 2023-2025 make the compression algorithm argument harder to dismiss.
SIMULATION THEORYWhy We Dream: The Simulation’s Maintenance Window
You spend a third of your life doing it. Your brain is more active during it than when you're awake. You hallucinate entire worlds. Why we dream might be the simulation's most revealing maintenance routine —” and what your brain does when you're not watching.
SIMULATION THEORYThe Card That Knew You Were Watching: Sixty Years of RNG Anomaly Research
For sixty years, random number generators in laboratories across the world have produced small, persistent, partial-replication-rate anomalies that correlate with conscious attention. Either consciousness has measurable physical effects, or the field has been producing consistent false positives for six decades.
SIMULATION THEORYThe Network That Runs When You Don’t: What the Default Mode Network Reveals
When your brain is doing nothing in particular, it is doing something specific: it is running a continuous, high-energy simulation of you. The Default Mode Network consumes 60-80 percent of the brain's resting energy simulating autobiographical memory, future projection, social inference. The simulation runs by default. The simulation can be suppressed by meditation. The simulation is what your brain is doing when you are doing nothing. The simulation is running.
SIMULATION THEORYAre We Living in a Simulation? — The Full Investigation
The Mathematical Case for the Simulation Hypothesis
SIMULATION THEORYQuantum Consciousness: Does Observation Create Reality?
The double-slit experiment and why the observer may be the most important part of physics.
SIMULATION THEORYI Remember When Google Only Gave You Ten Links
The death of the librarian and the birth of the casino
SIMULATION THEORYI Remember Dial-Up Like a Trauma Bond
The handshake that defined a generation
SIMULATION THEORYWhen Memory Became a Subscription
We outsourced our memory to the cloud. The ancient Greeks warned us about this.
SIMULATION THEORYAGI’S 12 ENDINGS — HOW MIT MAPS THE DEATH OF MAN
Max Tegmark ran the math. Sixty percent of his peers rate one outcome worse than extinction. Welcome to the future.