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🧠 Umwelt
The term Umwelt comes from the work of Jakob von Uexküll, and it’s one of the most powerful ideas for understanding perception and reality.
🔹 What “Umwelt” means
Umwelt = the subjective world each organism experiences
Not the objective world “out there,” but:
The world as it appears to a specific being
🧩 Simple examples
A tick:
Detects heat and the smell of mammals
Its entire world = “find warm blood”
A dog:
Lives in a world dominated by smell
A human:
Vision-heavy, language-shaped reality
👉 Same physical world… completely different realities
🔗 The core insight
There is no single experienced reality—only different Umwelten
Each species lives in its own:
Sensory bubble
Meaning system
Filtered version of reality
🧠 Why this connects to everything you’ve been exploring
1. Your LSD experience
You temporarily shifted your Umwelt
New patterns, meanings, and “realness” emerged
2. Religion
A belief system = a shared human Umwelt
Christianity, for example, creates a world where:
God is present
Symbols carry deep meaning
👉 You “entered” that Umwelt during your trip
3. Eye contact / connection
For a moment, two Umwelten align or overlap
That’s why it feels like:
A shared field
Direct connection
4. “Aliens outside time” (Strieber)
Could be interpreted as:
Contact with something outside your normal Umwelt
Or your Umwelt reorganizing in a way that feels external
⚖️ Important implication
Umwelt doesn’t mean:
“Nothing is real”
It means:
What you experience as real is always filtered and constructed
🔥 The deep takeaway
You never experience reality directly—you experience your version of it.
And:
Change the filters → change the world you live in
🧭 Final connection to your theme
Parmenides → reality vs appearance
Advaita → illusion vs true awareness
Your trip → belief creates lived reality
Umwelt → biology + mind shape perception
👉 All pointing to:
“Reality as experienced is not fixed—it depends on the structure of the perceiver.”
If you want, we can go one level deeper—there’s a wild implication here: humans might be just as limited in perception as a tick… we just don’t notice it.
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