Thursday, 19 March 2026

Pluriverse

 That’s a powerful shift in perspective—and it lines up with some of the more radical interpretations of modern physics and philosophy.


The idea you’re pointing to is often called the “pluriverse”: instead of one fixed, objective reality “out there,” reality is something that emerges from many interacting viewpoints. In this framing, reality isn’t discovered so much as co-created.



Where this idea comes from



In physics, one influence is Quantum Mechanics, especially interpretations that challenge the notion of a single observer-independent world.


For example:


  • QBism (Quantum Bayesianism) suggests that the wavefunction doesn’t describe an objective reality, but rather an agent’s personal expectations about outcomes.
  • Physicist Carlo Rovelli proposes Relational Quantum Mechanics, where properties of objects only exist relative to other objects—not absolutely.



In both views, reality is not a single, universal script. It’s more like a network of relationships.



From universe to pluriverse



The traditional “universe” assumes:


  • One reality
  • Observer-independent facts
  • A God’s-eye perspective (even if we can’t access it)



The pluriverse flips that:


  • Many valid perspectives
  • Reality emerges through interaction
  • No single privileged viewpoint



This doesn’t mean “anything goes” or that truth disappears. Instead, truth becomes situated—what’s real depends on the relationships and interactions involved.



What it implies



If reality is co-created:


  • Observation is not passive—it’s participatory
  • Knowledge is not just “finding facts,” but engaging with the world
  • Different perspectives aren’t just opinions—they can be constitutive of reality itself



This resonates beyond physics, too:


  • In philosophy (pragmatism, phenomenology)
  • In anthropology (multiple ontologies across cultures)
  • Even in social life—shared meanings literally shape the world we live in




A grounded way to think about it



You don’t have to take this as mystical. A practical interpretation could be:


Reality has constraints (you can’t just imagine gravity away), but within those constraints, what matters, what is real, and how things exist depends on interactions, context, and perspective.


So instead of:


“There is one fixed reality we’re trying to uncover”


It becomes:


“Reality is continuously formed through relationships—and we are participants in that process.”


If you want, I can break this down with concrete examples (like how this shows up in everyday perception or decision-making), or contrast it with other interpretations like the Many-Worlds view.


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