What If Being Human Is Like Playing a Game You Don’t Understand? (Investigation)
If reality had a game-like structure, we would not just expect rules. We would expect strategies. We would expect patterns. And we would expect that some ways of playing lead to very different outcomes than others. In this investigation, we test that idea. Using game theory, we look at how decisions behave inside a system where outcomes depend on interaction, constraints, and time. Then we compare that to something completely different. The Hero’s Journey, a pattern found across cultures that describes transformation through challenge. The question is: Are these just ideas or are they describing the same underlying structure from different angles? If reality behaves like a system where strategies compete outcomes emerge from interaction and only some ways of playing hold up over time then what we are looking at is not random. It is structured. And the way you play matters. My links: https://linktr.ee/nick.zei

Disclosure Decoded: What They Won't Tell You

John Conway: Surreal Numbers - How playing games led to more numbers than anybody ever thought of

David Deutsch - What is Ultimate Reality?

Is Reality Really Real? With Donald Hoffman

The Physicist Who Broke Time

Will AI destroy the economy?

Society Lied to Us: We're all Wage Slaves, I Can Prove it.

Stoicism for people who don’t want self-help | Massimo Pigliucci: Full Interview

Creator of C++: Bell Labs, Negative Overhead Abstraction, Mistakes | Bjarne Stroustrup

COLLAPSE of Personal Computing | Investigation Into the Destruction of Ownership

Chase Hughes: The 3 "Dark Psychology" Tricks To Read Anyone's Mind!

Comparing 400+ Theories of Consciousness

The World's Most Important Machine

"Mental Lag" Is Why You Can't Communicate Well

Infinity, Paradoxes, Gödel Incompleteness & the Mathematical Multiverse | Lex Fridman Podcast #488

How to Focus to Change Your Brain | Huberman Lab Essentials

Why Science Doesn’t Make Laws Anymore

1: Introduction to Perception

The FBI and Socrates -- the Same 17 Sentences

