1Foreword
364.1. Consciousness and reality
21. Introduction
374.2. After death...
31.1. Let's change our perspective
384.3. Gödel's incompleteness theorem and the paradox of self-awareness
41.2. The philosophical and scientific background
394.4. Consciousness and soul as an inner perspective
51.2.1. Platonism – the world of existing ideas
404.5. The illusion of free will
61.2.2. Max Tegmark and the Mathematical Universe Hypothesis
414.6. Subjective perception of time in fractal structures
71.2.3. Digital physics – reality as computation
424.7. The formula cannot be calculated – we are in it
81.2.4. Quantum physics as the wild child of reality
434.8. Reality as a self-speaking structure
91.2.5. Fractal geometry as God's fingerprint
444.9. Numenism as mental liberation
101.2.6. Self-interpreting structures
455. Scientific parallels and cosmological consequences
111.2.7. The independence of numenism
465.1. Mathematical descriptions of quantum physics
122. The nature of reality
475.2. Fractal geometry as scientific proof
132.1. Is the world changing, or do we misunderstand it?
485.3. Fractal-like structures in the world
142.2. Fields of science, layers and distortions of knowledge
495.4. Patterns in physical laws
152.3. Dimensions
505.5. Spontaneous remission
162.4. Physical properties – The paradox of measurement: 2.4.1. Distances - Perception of magnitudes
515.6. The universe as a fractal pattern
172.5. Matter – the illusion of compactness
525.7. Black holes, event horizons and asymptotes
182.6. Time – The dimension of processes: 2.6.1. But what was there before the Big Bang?
535.8. Multiverse and self-similarity
192.7. Space – Does it exist on its own?
545.9. Digital physics, information theory
202.8. Mass and weight – The reality behind the concepts
555.10. The internal examination of wave nature and structure
212.9. States of matter – Forms of behaviour of matter
565.11. The relationship between simulation theory and numenism
222.10. Light and other radiation – Visible and invisible reality
575.12. Quantum thinking and the world formula
232.11. Force fields and gravity – but how?
586. Religious-philosophical impulses
242.12. Temperature as a sensory illusion
596.1. Problems with religions. Contradictions, paradoxes.
252.13. The quantum world, where interpretable reality ceases to exist
606.2. A new direction of interpretation
263. The world as a mathematical structure
616.3. Faith as a patterned relationship
273.1. The strange world of numbers
626.4. Morality, free will and the self as an illusion
283.2. Fractals, chaotic systems, self-organisation
637. Critical Reflections
293.3. The order that emerges at the edge of infinity – the structure that repeats itself.
647.1. Possible objections and responses
303.4. The world of fractals – when simple rules give rise to infinite patterns
657.2. Limitations
313.5. When order emerges from chaos
667.3. Practical implications of the model
323.6. Self-repetitions in reality: when the world rhymes with itself over and over again
677.4. Limits and open questions
333.7. Matter, space and time as illusions
688. And things resonate
343.8. Time as drifting in patterns
69Impressum
354. The mathematics of consciousness