Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Reality and Construal: 1 Construal Is Not Optional

The preceding series established a negative result:

reality cannot be coherently specified as independent of construal.

That result does not yet tell us what construal is.

It only shows that it cannot be excluded.

The present task is to take the first positive step:

to show that construal is not an optional feature of our engagement with reality, but a necessary condition of its articulation.


1. The Misleading Picture

Construal is often treated as something added to reality.

On this view:

  • reality exists in itself,

  • and construal is a secondary activity — describing, interpreting, or representing what is already there.

This picture appears intuitive.

It is also untenable.

It presupposes that reality can be specified independently of the very processes by which it is articulated — a presupposition already shown to be incoherent.


2. Articulation Requires Distinction

To say anything about reality is to articulate it.

Articulation, in its minimal form, requires distinction:

  • something must be distinguished from something else,

  • a boundary must be drawn,

  • a difference must be marked.

Without distinction, there is no content.

But distinction is not given independently.

It is enacted.

To distinguish is to construe.


3. No Access Without Construal

One might attempt to retain independence by claiming:

reality exists independently, even if we can only access it through construal.

But this move fails to secure what it intends.

If all access to reality is mediated by construal, then:

  • every specification of what reality is like,

  • every claim about its structure,

  • every distinction we draw,

occurs within construal.

There is no standpoint from which reality can be described as it is apart from these conditions.

The appeal to independence becomes empty.


4. Construal as Condition, Not Addition

The alternative is not to deny reality.

It is to recognise the role of construal correctly.

Construal is not:

  • a layer added to a pre-given world,

  • a distortion of an underlying reality,

  • or a subjective overlay.

It is the condition under which anything can appear as determinate at all.

Without construal:

  • no distinctions are drawn,

  • no entities are delimited,

  • no properties are specified.

There is no articulated reality.


5. The Irreducibility of Construal

This point can be stated more sharply.

Any attempt to eliminate construal must:

  • specify what remains without it,

  • describe that remainder,

  • and distinguish it from construal.

But each of these steps reintroduces construal.

The attempt to remove it presupposes it.

Construal is therefore irreducible.

It cannot be derived from something more basic, nor eliminated in favour of something more fundamental.


6. Beyond the Optional Model

Once this is recognised, the status of construal changes.

It is no longer:

  • optional,

  • secondary,

  • or contingent.

It is necessary.

Not in the sense that all possible beings must “interpret” reality,
but in the sense that:

without construal, there is no articulated reality to be described.


7. What Has Been Shown

The argument does not claim that reality is created by construal.

It claims something more precise:

any specification of reality — any claim about what there is, or how it is — is made within construal.

To attempt to step outside this condition is not to reach a more fundamental level.

It is to lose the possibility of specification altogether.


Final Statement

Construal is not optional.

It is not something added to reality after the fact,
nor a distortion of an independently given world.

It is the condition under which reality becomes articulable at all.

Without construal, nothing can be said.

And nothing that can be said escapes it. 🔒🔥

Tuesday, 17 March 2026

The Hunting of the Snore

In a corridor carved from impossible light,
Where staircases looped in municipal fright,
The Professors of Gormenghast assembled their gear —
With tweed jackets solemn and eyebrows austere.

They carried fine notebooks of rigid design,
And compasses humming in disciplined line,
For they’d heard, in a lecture delivered at dusk,
Of a creature called Snore (not to be confused with Snark).

It lurked in the angles of rooms that were round,
In echoes that travelled but never made sound,
And nested between every surface and plane
Of Escher’s grand architecture of brain.

The hunt began briskly at Quadrant Four,
Where ceilings were floors and the floors were a door,
And ladders ascended by descending first,
Which somewhat confused the departmental thirst.

“Observe!” cried a Professor of Syntax and Stone,
Adjusting his spectacles etched from bone,
“The creature must surely inhabit the gap
Between proposition and diagrammatic map!”

They stalked through reflections that multiplied space,
Each mirror revealing another mirror’s face,
Till identity shimmered like powdered chalk
And footsteps dissolved in ontological talk.

In a corridor tiled with kaleidoscope hue
They encountered themselves in triplicate view —
Three Gormenghasts arguing slightly apart
About whether Snore was a method or art.

One version insisted the beast was a trope,
Another proposed it resided in scope,
While a third took meticulous notes on the light
And classified shadows by scholarly rite.

Above them, in spirals of chromatic flare,
Staircases twisted through midair air,
And Professors ascended by standing still,
Which satisfied part of their theoretical will.

At last in a chamber of mirrored delight
They glimpsed what appeared to be Snore in full sight:
A whispering absence, impeccably clad,
With footnotes, citations, and posture quite mad.

It bowed with precision. It shimmered. It sighed.
It fractured in angles that could not divide.
It existed precisely where existence withdrew —
In the space between theory and something that’s true.

The Hunters consulted their notebooks in haste,
But found every page had been neatly erased.
For Snore, being subtle, had rewritten the plan
In margins invisible to diagram.

So they paused in the hall of kaleidoscope air,
Surrounded by versions of everywhere,
And agreed (in a tone of profound analysis)
That the hunt was complete — though lacking premises.

And thus in Escher’s reflective domain,
The Professors returned — though not quite the same.
For each had acquired, in recursive delight,
A small appreciation of infinite night.

The Snore, meanwhile, thrives in academic terrain —
In footnotes, in mirrors, in structural strain.
It prefers not pursuit, but the tension between
What models declare and what might have been.

Reality Independent of Construal Is a Self-Undermining Concept

The idea that reality exists independently of construal is often treated as the minimal metaphysical commitment of realism. It appears modest: reality is what is there regardless of how we describe it.

However, this formulation contains a structural difficulty. The very concept of “reality independent of construal” can only be articulated within construal. Once this is recognised, the independence thesis becomes self-undermining.

The argument proceeds in three steps.


1. Independence Is a Descriptive Claim

To assert that reality is independent of construal is already to make a distinction:

  • between reality, and

  • the acts of describing, interpreting, or articulating it.

That distinction is not given independently. It is drawn.

Any claim about independence must therefore be formulated within a system of distinctions — that is, within construal.

There is no way to state the independence thesis without performing the very activity it claims to transcend.


2. Reference and Specification Are Construal Acts

To refer to “reality” is to delimit something as the target of discourse.
To describe it as “independent” is to attribute a property.
To distinguish it from construal is to establish a conceptual boundary.

Each of these operations is an act of articulation.

Reference, distinction, and predication are not optional additions to thought. They are the conditions under which any claim — including metaphysical ones — can be expressed.

Therefore, any specification of “reality as independent” necessarily depends upon structured acts of construal.


3. The Independence Thesis Cannot Escape Its Own Conditions

The thesis asserts that reality does not depend on construal.

But the thesis itself:

  • is formulated through construal,

  • relies on distinctions produced by construal,

  • and gains meaning only within a framework of articulation.

If all intelligible claims are made within construal, then the claim that reality exists independently of construal cannot be specified as a coherent alternative standpoint.

It cannot be described without relying on what it denies.

This is not a contradiction in content.

It is a dependence in form.

The concept attempts to step outside the very conditions that make conceptualisation possible.


Conclusion

The idea of reality independent of construal is not false in the ordinary sense.

It is structurally unstable.

To state it is to rely on construal; to deny construal is to rely on distinctions; to specify independence is to presuppose articulation.

Therefore:

“Reality independent of construal” cannot be coherently specified as a standpoint outside construal.

It is a concept that undermines itself upon articulation.

What remains is not the denial of reality.

It is the recognition that reality, as accessible to thought, is always already articulated within structured acts of construal.

Reality and Cosmology: The Limits of Independence: 6 Why Cosmology Cannot See Its Own Assumptions

The preceding essays have argued that cosmology does not, and cannot, do what it is commonly taken to do.

  • It does not observe the universe as a whole.

  • It does not specify a global state.

  • It does not identify intrinsic initial conditions.

  • It does not describe an object called “the universe.”

And yet, none of these absences are typically experienced as problems within the discipline.

On the contrary, cosmology proceeds with extraordinary confidence.

The question, then, is not simply whether these assumptions hold.

It is:

Why do they appear so natural that they are rarely noticed at all?


1. The Transparency of the Framework

The first reason is structural.

The assumptions in question do not appear as explicit claims within cosmological theory.

They function instead as conditions of intelligibility:

  • that there is a total system,

  • that it has a state,

  • that it evolves from initial conditions,

  • that it can, in principle, be described.

These are not argued for.

They are presupposed in the very act of modelling.

As a result, they are not encountered as hypotheses that might be false.

They are encountered as the background against which anything can be said.


2. Mathematical Closure

Modern cosmology is formulated in highly developed mathematical frameworks, many of them inheriting their structure from theories associated with Albert Einstein.

These frameworks are internally coherent and extraordinarily powerful.

They allow:

  • precise formulation of models,

  • rigorous derivation of consequences,

  • and detailed comparison with observation.

But mathematical coherence has a side effect:

it stabilises the assumptions built into the formalism.

If a model is well-defined, solvable, and empirically successful, the conceptual conditions that made it possible tend to disappear from view.

They are no longer experienced as assumptions.

They are experienced as the natural structure of reality itself.


3. The Success Feedback Loop

Empirical success reinforces this invisibility.

When a theory successfully predicts:

  • the distribution of galaxies,

  • the structure of background radiation,

  • or large-scale dynamical patterns,

it becomes increasingly difficult to question the conceptual framework in which those predictions are formulated.

Success is taken to confirm not only the model, but the ontology implicitly associated with it.

This is the familiar inference:

the theory works, therefore its picture of reality must be approximately true.

But as earlier arguments have shown, this inference is not warranted.

Empirical adequacy does not require ontological independence.


4. Training and Disciplinary Practice

The invisibility is also sociological, though not in any trivial sense.

Physicists are trained to:

  • solve equations,

  • construct models,

  • and relate theory to observation.

They are not typically trained to interrogate the ontological assumptions that make these practices possible.

As a result, those assumptions are not experienced as optional.

They are simply part of what it is to “do physics.”

This is not a failure.

It is what allows the discipline to function.

But it also ensures that certain questions are never asked.


5. Language and Reification

Ordinary language plays a further role.

Terms such as:

  • “the universe,”

  • “its state,”

  • “its evolution,”

encourage the reification of what are, in fact, theoretical constructs.

The grammar of the language suggests an object.

And once the object is tacitly accepted, the rest follows:

  • objects have properties,

  • properties define states,

  • states evolve over time.

What begins as a linguistic convenience becomes an ontological commitment.


6. The Persistence of Inheritance

Finally, cosmology inherits its conceptual structure from classical physics.

Classical theory is built around:

  • objects,

  • states,

  • and deterministic evolution.

These concepts work extraordinarily well within their domain.

When cosmology emerged, it extended them to the largest possible scale.

But inheritance is not justification.

The fact that these concepts function locally does not guarantee that they remain valid when applied to the totality.


7. Why the Problem Does Not Appear

Taken together, these factors produce a distinctive situation.

The independence assumptions:

  • are built into the framework,

  • stabilised by mathematics,

  • reinforced by empirical success,

  • embedded in training,

  • and naturalised by language.

Under these conditions, they do not appear as assumptions at all.

They appear as the obvious background of any possible description.

This is why the problem does not present itself within cosmology.

Not because it has been solved.

But because it has been rendered invisible.


8. What Changes When It Becomes Visible

Once the assumptions are brought into view, their status changes.

They are no longer necessary conditions of thought.

They become contestable commitments.

And once they are contestable, alternative interpretations become possible:

  • cosmology without global states,

  • without intrinsic initial conditions,

  • without the universe as an object.

What remains is not the collapse of the discipline.

It is its clarification.


Final Statement

Cosmology cannot see its own assumptions because they are built into the conditions under which it operates.

They are not conclusions of the science.

They are the inherited framework within which the science proceeds.

To expose them is not to undermine cosmology.

It is to understand, for the first time, what it is actually doing. 🌌🔥

Reality and Cosmology: The Limits of Independence: 5 Cosmology Without the Universe

Cosmology presents itself as the science of the universe.

It claims to describe:

  • its origin,

  • its structure,

  • its evolution.

But the preceding essays have established something unsettling:

  • the universe cannot be observed as a whole,

  • it cannot be assigned a global state,

  • it has no intrinsic initial conditions,

  • and it is not an object.

Taken together, these results force a reconsideration:

What, exactly, is cosmology about?

The answer is both simpler and more radical than expected:

Cosmology does not describe the universe.
It describes relations within experience structured at the largest accessible scales.


1. The Disappearance of the Target

If the universe is not an object, then it cannot be the target of description in the usual sense.

There is no “thing” whose properties cosmology progressively uncovers.

The apparent target dissolves under analysis.

Yet cosmology remains extraordinarily successful.

This is not a contradiction.

It is a clue.


2. What the Data Actually Are

Consider the empirical basis of cosmology:

  • redshifts of distant galaxies,

  • anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background,

  • large-scale distributions of matter.

These are not observations of “the universe as a whole.”

They are local measurements, made from specific locations, under specific conditions, using specific instruments.

They are already situated within a framework of observation.


3. The Role of Theory

Cosmological theory does not step outside these observations to describe a global object.

Instead, it provides structures that organise them:

  • models that relate redshift to distance,

  • frameworks that account for background radiation patterns,

  • equations that constrain large-scale dynamics.

These structures allow widely separated observations to cohere.

But coherence is not the same as object-description.


4. The Illusion of Total Description

The idea that cosmology describes the universe arises from a subtle shift.

Because the models are global in form, they are taken to describe a global object.

But this inference does not follow.

A model can be globally defined without its target being a global object.

What is global is the structure of the model, not the existence of a thing corresponding to it.


5. From Objects to Structures

Once the object assumption is removed, the nature of cosmology becomes clearer.

It is not a theory of a thing.

It is a theory of structure:

  • relations among observables,

  • constraints linking phenomena across scales,

  • patterns that remain stable under transformation.

The success of cosmology lies in its ability to capture these structures with extraordinary precision.


6. Why the Misinterpretation Persists

Why, then, is cosmology still interpreted as describing the universe?

Because the independence ontology demands it.

If reality is assumed to consist of objects with intrinsic properties, then:

  • there must be a largest object,

  • it must have properties,

  • and cosmology must describe them.

This is not derived from physics.

It is imposed upon it.


7. Cosmology Reinterpreted

Freed from this assumption, cosmology can be understood differently.

It does not tell us what the universe is.

It tells us how phenomena are related across the widest accessible domains.

It constructs:

  • coherent relational frameworks,

  • testable structural models,

  • and predictive constraints linking observation and theory.

This is no small achievement.

It is simply not what it is usually taken to be.


8. The End of the Universe (as Object)

The phrase “the universe” does not disappear.

But its role changes.

It no longer names an object with properties.

It becomes a limit concept — a way of referring to the maximal domain within which our relational models operate.

It marks a boundary of description, not a thing described.


9. A Discipline Reframed

On this view, cosmology is not the science of the universe as an object.

It is the science of:

  • large-scale relational structure,

  • global coherence conditions,

  • and the organisation of observation across spacetime.

Its success does not depend on describing an independent totality.

It depends on tracking structure.


Final Statement

Cosmology does not describe the universe.

It describes structured relations within experience at the largest scales accessible to theory and observation.

The “universe” it appears to describe is a projection —
a conceptual residue of an ontology that no longer holds.

What remains is not a diminished science.

It is a clarified one. 🌌🔥

Reality and Cosmology: The Limits of Independence: 4 The Universe Is Not an Object

Cosmology speaks, almost without exception, of “the universe” as if it were a thing.

It is treated as:

  • a system with properties,

  • an entity with a state,

  • an object that evolves over time.

This language feels unavoidable.

It is also conceptually misleading.

The claim of this essay is simple:

The universe is not an object in the sense required by physical theory.

This is not a denial of reality.

It is a clarification of what kind of reality cosmology actually engages.


1. What an Object Is

In physics, an object is not merely “something that exists.”

It has a more specific structure:

  • it can be individuated from other objects,

  • it can be assigned properties,

  • it can, in principle, be observed or measured,

  • and it exists within a framework that distinguishes it from its surroundings.

An object, in other words, is something that appears within a system of relations.

It is defined by its place in that system.


2. The Boundary Requirement

Every object presupposes a boundary.

To treat something as an object is to distinguish it from what it is not.

This distinction is not optional.

Without it, individuation fails.

In ordinary physics, this is straightforward:

  • a particle is distinguished from other particles,

  • a system is separated from its environment,

  • a region is defined within a larger space.

But the universe includes all such distinctions.

There is no “outside” relative to which it could be bounded.


3. The Failure of Individuation

If the universe has no external boundary, then it cannot be individuated in the same way as an object within it.

It is not one thing among others.

It is the totality within which “things” are distinguished.

To call it an object is therefore to apply a concept outside its domain of validity.

It treats the totality as if it were a member of the set it contains.


4. The Illusion of Global Properties

Cosmology often attributes properties to the universe:

  • its curvature,

  • its expansion rate,

  • its energy content.

These appear to be properties of a single object.

But on closer inspection, they are not intrinsic features of a bounded entity.

They are parameters within models that organise relations among observable phenomena.

They do not describe the universe as an object.

They describe structures within cosmological description.


5. The Observer Problem Returns

The idea of the universe as an object also reintroduces a familiar difficulty.

Objects are, in principle, observable.

But as established in Part I:

the universe cannot be observed from the outside.

There is no standpoint from which it could appear as a whole.

The notion of the universe as an object therefore presupposes a perspective that does not exist.


6. The Persistence of a Metaphor

Why, then, does the language of objects persist?

Because it is inherited from the domain in which physics first developed.

Classical physics deals with:

  • bodies,

  • systems,

  • and objects interacting in space.

Cosmology extends this language to the totality.

But the extension is metaphorical.

The universe is treated as if it were an object, because our conceptual tools were built for objects.


7. What Cosmology Actually Engages

If the universe is not an object, what is cosmology about?

It is not about describing a thing.

It is about organising a network of relations:

  • correlations across spacetime,

  • constraints among observables,

  • patterns that hold across different scales.

These structures do not belong to an object.

They are what cosmological theory articulates.


8. The Category Error Completed

At this point, the full pattern becomes visible.

Cosmology inherits from classical physics a set of concepts:

  • state,

  • initial condition,

  • object.

It then applies them to the universe as a whole.

But each of these concepts depends on conditions that fail at the cosmological scale:

  • a state requires an external framework,

  • initial conditions require a given temporal structure,

  • objects require boundaries.

None of these are available.

The result is a systematic category error.


9. A Different Orientation

Once this is recognised, the language of objects can be replaced with something more precise.

Cosmology does not describe a cosmic object.

It articulates:

  • relational structures,

  • patterns of constraint,

  • and coherent models that organise observation.

The universe is not a thing with properties.

It is the totality within which such structures are defined.


Final Statement

The universe is not an object.

It is not a system with intrinsic properties,
nor a bounded entity evolving through time.

It is the horizon within which objects, systems, and properties are constituted.

To treat it as an object is to extend a local concept beyond its domain.

And at the cosmological scale, that extension no longer holds. 🌌🔥

Reality and Cosmology: The Limits of Independence: 3 There Are No Initial Conditions

Cosmology often begins with a familiar move:

Specify the initial conditions of the universe, then derive its evolution.

From the hot dense state associated with the Big Bang to the detailed parameters of early cosmological models, the idea is clear:

The universe began in a particular state, and everything that follows unfolds from it.

This picture appears natural.

It is also deeply misleading.

The claim of this essay is precise:

The notion of “initial conditions of the universe” does not have the meaning it is usually taken to have.


1. What Initial Conditions Require

In physics, initial conditions are not standalone facts.

They are defined within a structured framework:

  • a dynamical theory,

  • a set of variables,

  • and a temporal parameter against which change is measured.

Initial conditions specify values at a boundary — typically a starting time — relative to that framework.

Crucially, they are always relative to a model.

They do not exist independently of it.


2. The Cosmological Extension

Cosmology extends this idea to the universe as a whole.

It speaks as if:

  • there was a moment “at the beginning,”

  • the universe had a definite state at that moment,

  • and that state serves as the initial condition for all subsequent evolution.

But this extension carries a hidden assumption:

that the universe can be treated as a system evolving within a pre-given temporal framework.

As earlier parts of this series have shown, this assumption is unstable.


3. The Problem of Time

In cosmology, time is not an external parameter.

It is part of the structure being described.

The geometry of spacetime itself is dynamical, as shown in theories descending from Albert Einstein.

This creates an immediate difficulty:

How can one specify an “initial” condition when the very structure of time is part of what is being modelled?

An initial condition presupposes a temporal ordering.

But in cosmology, that ordering is not given independently of the theory.

The boundary is defined within the model, not prior to it.


4. The Illusion of a Beginning

The idea of an absolute beginning is therefore more fragile than it appears.

The Big Bang is often described as a moment in time at which the universe came into existence.

But within physical theory, it functions as a limit of a model — a boundary beyond which the equations no longer apply in their current form.

It is not a directly observed event.
It is not a moment specified independently of theoretical structure.

It is a feature of a model’s domain.


5. Model-Dependence of Initial Conditions

Once this is recognised, the status of “initial conditions” changes.

Different cosmological models:

  • define different variables,

  • use different temporal parameters,

  • and specify different kinds of boundaries.

What counts as an “initial condition” varies accordingly.

There is no single, model-independent set of initial conditions that can be said to belong intrinsically to the universe.

Instead, there are model-relative boundary specifications.


6. The Disappearance of Intrinsic Origins

If initial conditions are always defined within a theoretical framework, then the idea that the universe possesses an intrinsic origin with determinate properties becomes difficult to sustain.

There is no neutral standpoint from which such an origin could be specified.

No external clock by which its “initial moment” could be fixed.
No independent set of variables that could describe it absolutely.

The notion of an intrinsic beginning dissolves into a set of relational descriptions within models.


7. What Cosmology Actually Provides

Cosmology does not, in practice, uncover the intrinsic starting point of the universe.

What it provides are:

  • models that successfully organise large-scale observational data,

  • constraints on how early-universe conditions must be structured to account for current observations,

  • and frameworks that relate different stages of cosmic evolution.

These are powerful achievements.

But they do not amount to a specification of intrinsic initial conditions.


8. The Residue of Independence

The idea of initial conditions as intrinsic features of the universe is a residue of independence ontology.

It reflects the assumption that reality must have a determinate state at every moment, including the first.

But this assumption relies on:

  • a fixed temporal framework,

  • a well-defined global state,

  • and an external standpoint from which both can be specified.

Cosmology provides none of these.


9. A Different Picture

Once the independence assumption is set aside, a different understanding emerges.

The “beginning” of the universe is not an intrinsic event with fixed properties.

It is a boundary within a network of theoretical descriptions — a point at which our current models reach their limit and require extension or revision.

What exists are not absolute initial conditions, but structured relations connecting different regions of cosmological description.


Final Statement

There are no initial conditions of the universe.

There are only boundary conditions defined within models —
framework-dependent specifications that organise our understanding of cosmic structure.

The idea of an intrinsic beginning belongs to a metaphysical picture inherited from classical physics.

At the cosmological scale, that picture no longer holds. 🌌🔥

Reality and Cosmology: The Limits of Independence: 2 The Universe Has No State

Cosmology routinely speaks of “the state of the universe.”

It assigns values to global quantities, specifies initial conditions, and describes large-scale evolution as if the universe were a single, well-defined physical system.

This language is familiar.

It is also misleading.

The claim of this essay is direct:

The universe does not have a state in the sense required by classical or even standard physical usage.

This is not a limitation of measurement.

It is a limitation of the concept itself.


1. What a State Requires

In physics, the notion of a state is not primitive. It is defined within a specific structure.

To specify the state of a system, one requires:

  • a set of observables,

  • a framework in which those observables are defined,

  • and a context in which their values can, in principle, be determined.

In classical mechanics, this structure is straightforward. A state assigns definite values to quantities such as position and momentum.

In quantum mechanics, the situation is more subtle, but the principle remains: a state encodes the probabilities of outcomes relative to specified measurement contexts.

In both cases, the concept of a state is inseparable from a framework of observation and definition.


2. The Missing Context

When cosmology attempts to speak of “the state of the universe,” it extends this concept beyond its domain of validity.

The universe includes all physical systems.

There is no external measurement context.

No independent set of observables defined from outside.
No standpoint from which a complete specification could be made.

Without such a context, the idea of a fully defined state loses its grounding.

A state is not something that exists in isolation.
It is something defined within a structure of relations.


3. The Quantum Case

The difficulty becomes sharper in quantum cosmology.

Quantum theory, as formulated by Erwin Schrödinger and Werner Heisenberg, describes systems in terms of states that evolve according to the Schrödinger equation.

But these states are defined relative to measurement frameworks that specify which observables are meaningful.

If one attempts to assign a quantum state to the entire universe, a problem arises:

Relative to what measurement context is this state defined?

There is no external observer.
No independent apparatus.
No context outside the system.

The concept of a universal quantum state therefore lacks the conditions that give it physical meaning.


4. The Illusion of Global Description

Cosmological models often give the impression that the universe can be described “all at once.”

Equations are written that assign values to global variables. The universe is treated as if it were a single object evolving through time.

But this is a projection of a local modelling strategy onto a totality that cannot sustain it.

In ordinary physics, global descriptions are grounded in local measurements that can, in principle, be coordinated.

In cosmology, there is no such coordinating framework outside the system itself.

The idea of a complete global description is therefore an extrapolation, not a given.


5. Relational Determination Instead

What cosmology actually provides are relations among observable phenomena:

  • correlations between redshift and distance,

  • patterns in the cosmic microwave background,

  • distributions of matter and radiation.

These are not intrinsic features of a globally specified object.

They are structured relations within the universe as observed from particular locations, using particular theoretical frameworks.

The content of cosmology is therefore relational, not intrinsic.


6. The Problem of Total Specification

The idea that the universe has a state presupposes that it can, in principle, be completely specified.

But complete specification requires:

  • a complete set of observables,

  • a complete framework of measurement,

  • and a standpoint from which the specification is meaningful.

None of these conditions can be satisfied for the universe as a whole.

There is no “outside” from which completeness can be defined.

The concept of a total state therefore becomes ill-posed.


7. A Category Error

At this point, the difficulty can be stated precisely.

To assign a state to the universe is to treat it as if it were a system within a larger framework.

But the universe is not a system within anything else.

It is the totality within which systems are defined.

The attempt to apply the concept of state at this level is therefore a category error.

It extends a concept beyond the conditions that make it meaningful.


8. What Cosmology Actually Does

Once this is recognised, the practice of cosmology can be reinterpreted more clearly.

Cosmological theories do not describe the intrinsic state of the universe.

They provide:

  • models that organise observable relations,

  • frameworks that coordinate data across vast scales,

  • and constraints on how phenomena cohere.

The success of these theories lies in their ability to track structure, not in their ability to specify an intrinsic global state.


9. The Consequence

The idea that the universe has a state is a residue of the independence ontology inherited from classical physics.

It reflects the assumption that reality must be describable as a self-contained object with intrinsic properties.

Cosmology shows that this assumption cannot be sustained at the largest scale.

The universe cannot be assigned a state in the same sense as a system within it.


Final Statement

The universe has no state.

What exists are structured relations within the universe — patterns of correlation, constraint, and coherence that cosmological theories describe with increasing precision.

The attempt to treat the universe as a single, independently specifiable system is not required by physics.

It is a metaphysical projection.

And at the cosmological scale, it no longer holds. 🌌

Reality and Cosmology: The Limits of Independence: 1 The Universe Cannot Be Observed

Modern cosmology is often presented as the most ambitious extension of physical theory: a science not merely of systems within the universe, but of the universe as a whole.

It asks:

  • What is the state of the universe?

  • What were its initial conditions?

  • How did it evolve?

Implicit in these questions is a powerful assumption:

The universe can be treated as a physical system like any other.

This assumption appears natural.

It is also deeply problematic.


1. The Hidden Model

In ordinary physics, the structure of inquiry is clear.

A system is:

  • prepared in some way,

  • allowed to evolve,

  • and then measured.

The theory connects these elements, yielding predictions about observable outcomes.

This structure presupposes a distinction between:

  • the system under investigation, and

  • the conditions under which it is observed.

But cosmology attempts to apply this same framework to the universe itself.

And here the structure breaks.


2. There Is No External Standpoint

To observe a system, one must stand in some relation to it.

There must be:

  • an experimental arrangement,

  • a measurement context,

  • a distinction between observer and observed.

But the universe, by definition, includes all physical systems.

There is nothing outside it.

No external measurement apparatus.
No independent observational standpoint.
No context that is not already part of what is being described.

This leads to a simple but devastating conclusion:

The universe cannot be observed in the way physical systems are ordinarily observed.


3. The Meaning of “State of the Universe”

Despite this, cosmology frequently speaks of “the state of the universe.”

But what does this mean?

In standard physics, a state is defined relative to:

  • a set of observables,

  • a measurement framework,

  • and a specification of possible outcomes.

If there is no external measurement context, then the notion of a fully specified, observer-independent state becomes unclear.

A “state of the universe” cannot be defined in the same way as the state of a laboratory system.

The concept is being extended beyond the conditions that give it meaning.


4. The Problem of Initial Conditions

The same issue arises in discussions of initial conditions.

Cosmology often posits that the universe began in a particular state — for example, a hot, dense configuration associated with the Big Bang.

But the notion of an “initial state” presupposes:

  • a temporal framework,

  • a set of variables,

  • and a way of specifying values.

All of these are defined within a theoretical and observational context.

If the universe is treated as a whole, the question arises:

Relative to what are these initial conditions specified?

Without a context of measurement or comparison, the idea of intrinsic initial conditions becomes conceptually unstable.


5. The Cosmological Extension of Independence

Cosmology inherits the independence assumption from earlier physics.

It treats the universe as:

  • a self-contained system,

  • possessing a definite state,

  • evolving according to physical laws.

This is independence ontology in its most expansive form.

But the very conditions that make the concept of a system meaningful in physics — preparation, measurement, and observational context — are absent at the cosmological level.

The assumption of independence is therefore no longer supported by the structure of the theory.


6. Observers Within the Universe

All observations of the universe are made from within it.

Astronomical data are gathered by instruments that are themselves part of the physical world.

The observational situation is therefore fundamentally different from that of laboratory physics.

We do not observe the universe from the outside.

We observe phenomena within it, from specific locations, under specific conditions, using particular theoretical frameworks.

Cosmological knowledge is therefore necessarily situated.


7. The Illusion of the “View from Nowhere”

Despite this, cosmological discourse often adopts what might be called a “view from nowhere.”

The universe is described as if its properties could be specified independently of any observational standpoint.

This perspective is a direct inheritance from the independence ontology of classical physics.

But once the absence of an external standpoint is recognised, the illusion becomes apparent.

There is no position from which the universe can be described in complete independence from all conditions of observation.


8. Rethinking Cosmology

If the universe cannot be observed as a system in the usual sense, then cosmology must be reinterpreted.

Rather than describing the intrinsic state of a self-contained object, cosmological theories can be understood as:

  • models that relate observable phenomena within the universe,

  • frameworks that organise large-scale patterns of data,

  • and structures that constrain how observations cohere.

The emphasis shifts from intrinsic description to relational organisation.


9. The Consequence

The attempt to treat the universe as an independently specifiable system extends the independence assumption beyond its domain of validity.

What worked as an approximation in classical physics becomes conceptually unstable at the cosmological scale.

The universe is not a system that can be observed from the outside.

It is the totality within which all observation takes place.


Final Statement

The universe cannot be observed.

And if it cannot be observed, it cannot be assigned a fully specified, context-independent state in the way classical ontology предполагает.

Cosmology therefore forces a recognition that was already emerging in quantum theory:

The idea of reality as something fully defined independently of all perspectives is not a neutral assumption.

It is a metaphysical inheritance.

And at the scale of the universe itself, it begins to break down. 🌌🔥