Stop Looking at Me: The Quantum Burger/Hotdog The 1/2 - looking at the world from the perspective of 0 is insane
by Aleph Rafuah
For over a century, quantum mechanics has been haunted by its greatest unsolved mystery: the measurement problem. How does a quantum system in superposition - a genuine cloud of multiple possibilities described by the Schrödinger equation - suddenly collapse into a single definite outcome upon observation? Why does the wave function behave one way until measured, then instantly another?
Mainstream interpretations have failed to resolve it cleanly. Copenhagen tells us not to ask. Many-Worlds says everything happens but cannot explain why we experience one branch. Most start from the assumption of a pre-existing zero - a passive void or undefined state waiting to be revealed.
This book offers a radically cleaner solution: reality does not begin in zero. It begins in 1.Consciousness is not emergent - it is primary. The 1 (the participatory, directed creative principle) opens a field of quantum doubling (superposition, entanglement, and branching potential - the 2). Observation is not passive collapse. It is the active 1 molding the 2 into a stable, definite 1-branch. Time emerges as the arrow of this molding. Space and gravity appear as the stabilized geometry of the molded branch.
Blending rigorous quantum foundations with ancient Hebrew insight, the book reveals the alphabet itself as a quantum interface: Aleph (1) as the silent Creator, Beit (2) as the house of superposition. Gematria and PaRDeS function as literal mechanisms of entanglement and multi-layered collapse. The Torah begins with Beit because creation begins inside the field of quantum possibility.
Vivid and practical, this framework turns the measurement problem into a solved feature of a participatory universe - one you actively shape every day through choice, attention, and intention.
The maybe never ends.
That is not a bug. It is the operating system. You are not observing reality. You are the 1 that molds it.