The world bends slightly in the direction you're looking

I see it as something you lean into. It literally bends with you, just a little.
So it's partly what you want it to be—but it’s also something in itself.

This has caused difficult situations for centuries. When you look at the world from a certain angle, it can feel like you're absolutely right in how you see it. But the same goes for the person looking from a different angle—they're just as certain they're right.

A dictator thinks he's the good guy
We often think of dictators as people who rise up to play the role of the villain. But from the dictator’s point of view, he’s the hero—and we’re the villains.
That might sound childish, but it’s genuinely hard to grasp.

Modern science is like the Church from centuries ago
Yes, really. You might not like hearing that, but it’s the same kind of institution. There are fixed ideas, and they’re held onto so rigidly that it becomes nearly impossible to think outside of them.

If I had to summarize science, it would go something like this:
We do A, and then B happens.
We do A again, and B happens again.
So A and B must be connected—and that’s how it works.

That’s literally all it is: repeating something until the outcome seems consistent, and then deciding that's how reality works.
But reality isn’t only linear. It also moves vertically, upside down, in black and white, and in layers. This kind of thinking captures just one tiny slice of a deeply layered reality.

If you keep repeating the same logic, it eventually starts working that way—because that’s how you’re looking at it.


The theory of evolution is flawed
The theory of evolution only works on a local scale.
What do you want to know—why species change?
Yes, DNA plays a role. But so does what they eat. Or whether they even want to have children.
And that’s something you can’t observe.
You also can’t extrapolate a local observation to a larger scale, or assume that just because you’ve observed something, you can reverse-engineer the cause from the effect.