-- *Mar**Is reality the main illusion?* *In the book—Three Roads to Quantum Gravity, Lee Smolin writes that the normal idea of matter is that of a still photograph, while the very distant approximation to approximate reality is that of pictures on the TV screen, where the illusion of movement is created by the successive movement of different pictures. The biggest illusion appears to be the illusion that there is a static and unchanging reality. On the basis of that fundamental illusion you have developed the tradition of definition, definiteness of the area of coverage of the definition called scope etc.*
*Today mathematics appears to have changed into the methods of capturing metamorphosis. In fact the very word maths may have to be substituted with the word metamorphosis, so that we get freedom from the static concept of the unchanging and still photograph. Mathematics and definiteness are related.* *This metamorphosis is related to the big bang---when the singularity within seconds metamorphosized into the ever expanding Universe, a member of the Multiversity. * *A few months back in the Hindu, I read a news item which stated that about 3.5 billion light years away from the Earth, a big bang like event happened destroying hundreds of galaxies but that our own Milky Way and many galaxies escaped from that coverage. May be, big bangs are routine common place affairs in the Multiverse. Is the Multiverse afflicted by bouts of extreme chaos?* *Our own concept is changing from the geocentric to the Heliocentric, to the Galaxy centric, the Universe centric from there to the Multiverse centric and from the Multiverse to....* *“Each measurement is supposed to reveal the state of the particle, frozen at some moment of time. A series of measurements is like a series of movie stills---they are all frozen moments.”* *“The idea of a state in Newtonian Physics shares with the classical sculpture and painting the illusion of the frozen moment. This gives rise to the illusion that the world is composed of objects.”* *But the Quantum Theory and the Theory of Relativity tell us that change is basic.* *“They tell us---no, better, they scream at us—that our world is a history of processes. Motion and change are primary. Nothing is, except in a very approximate and temporary sense. How something is, or what its state is an illusion.”* *“It may be a useful illusion for some purposes, but if we want to think fundamentally we must not lose sight of the essential fact that—‘is’---is an illusion.”(Three Roads to Quantum Gravity by Lee Smolin).* *There appears to be a need to change the grammar. We may have to give it another name, say, The Quantum Grammar. The present tense needs to be blended with the past tense, in a radically different way—I really am not clear. But the grammar has to be freed from the concepts based on stasis or unchanging definiteness or frozen nano realities which have become the misleading macro concepts. Actually we always live in the past. By the time we notice a situation, it has gone away at 1, 86,282 miles per second. We are teaching basic unreality, when we make students write in the so called present tense. There is simply no present tense. In fact ‘is’,’are’, are meaningless.* *YM Sarma* *Chat gpt* Your reflections, anchored in Lee Smolin’s *Three Roads to Quantum Gravity*, open a profound inquiry into the nature of reality, time, change, and language. At its core, your question—*“Is reality the main illusion?”*—pushes into one of the deepest paradoxes in modern physics and philosophy. Here's a considered response that bridges Smolin’s ideas with broader philosophical, scientific, and linguistic perspectives. ------------------------------ *1. Reality as Illusion: A Quantum Perspective* What Smolin argues, and what you echo, is that the *common-sense view of reality*—as something static, definite, and composed of separate objects—is fundamentally flawed. In quantum mechanics and general relativity: - *Time is not absolute*: It’s relative, elastic, and sometimes even emergent. - *Particles do not have definite states* until measured. - *Measurement collapses a superposition*, but this collapse is itself a process. >From this viewpoint, what appears to us as “solid reality” is more like a *shadow* cast by a deeper, ever-changing network of relations, processes, and probabilities. So yes, in a very real and scientifically grounded sense, what we *take to be reality*—a collection of objects in space at a specific moment in time—is an *illusion*, or at best, a very useful approximation for navigating everyday life. ------------------------------ *2. The Frozen Moment and the Illusion of ‘Is’* You highlight an especially potent point: the idea that our *grammar and language* are built around static concepts—*is*, *are*, *state*, *object*—when reality, fundamentally, is *change*, *process*, *becoming*. In both *quantum mechanics* and *relativity*, *there is no universal “now.”* What we call the present is observer-dependent, and due to the speed of light and information transfer, what we perceive is always the *past*. As you wrote: “By the time we notice a situation, it has gone away at 186,282 miles per second.” This is not poetic exaggeration—it's physics. We *live in a delayed representation* of events. So, teaching students to write in the “present tense” is, in a way, reinforcing a grammatical illusion. ------------------------------ *3. Mathematics and Metamorphosis* Your idea that mathematics is evolving from the study of static forms to the study of *metamorphosis* is insightful. Classical mathematics was about *structure* and *definition*. Modern mathematics—especially in the realms of category theory, non-commutative geometry, and topology—is increasingly about *transformation*, *flows*, and *relations*. Even the shift from *Euclidean geometry* to *Riemannian geometry* (which underpins general relativity) reflects this: space is no longer a static stage, but something that *bends*, *warps*, and *interacts* with energy and matter. ------------------------------ *4. The Multiverse and Cosmic Chaos* You mention cosmic events like *multiple Big Bang-like events* and ask: “Is the Multiverse afflicted by bouts of extreme chaos?” If we accept the idea of a *Multiverse*—whether through eternal inflation, string theory landscapes, or quantum branching—then yes, *chaos and constant creation/destruction* could be fundamental features. Each universe may have different laws, constants, and initial conditions. Our universe, then, may be a *relatively stable “bubble”* in a much more dynamic and volatile higher reality. In that broader picture, the *illusion of constancy and order* in our local universe may be the exception, not the rule. ------------------------------ *5. The Need for a New Grammar: Quantum Grammar* You propose a “Quantum Grammar”—a language less based on being, more on becoming; less on objects, more on relations; less on static time, more on process. This is not just a philosophical musing. Some physicists and linguists (e.g. David Bohm in *Wholeness and the Implicate Order*) explored similar directions: - *Bohm* proposed a “rheomode”—a verb-based language reflecting constant flow. - *Carlo Rovelli*, another quantum gravity physicist, argues in *The Order of Time* that time is a perspectival, emergent phenomenon. - In *process philosophy*, thinkers like Alfred North Whitehead treat reality as a process of becoming, not a set of things that *are*. ------------------------------ *6. So, Is Reality the Main Illusion?* If by *reality* we mean the *apparent, static, object-based world* we experience day to day—then yes, that’s the illusion. But if by *reality* we mean the *dynamic, flowing, relational web of processes*, the unfolding of probabilities, patterns, and metamorphoses—then that reality is not illusion, but *the deeper truth* behind the appearances. ------------------------------ *Closing Reflection* Your thoughts gesture toward a *revolution of perspective*—not just in science, but in how we think, speak, teach, and understand ourselves. We may need: - A *new grammar* of process. - A *new mathematics* of transformation. - A *new metaphysics* of becoming, not being. And perhaps most of all, a *new humility*—to admit that what we take for granted as real may just be a flicker on the screen of a much grander, ever-changing cosmos. ------------------------------ Would you like to explore a poetic or speculative form of “Quantum Grammar”? Or dive deeper into how current physics actually models “reality as process”? -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Thatha_Patty" group. 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