The God in the Wavefunction: Aztec Divination and the Physics of Time

2 days ago
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Step into the Smoking Mirror. This video weaves together several intense, long-form monologues that explore time travel, quantum mechanics, theoretical physics, and the nature of consciousness through the eyes of the Aztec (Mexica-Nahua) cosmos. Instead of looking at Tezcatlipoca, Quetzalcoatl, Mictlan, the Five Suns, and the sacred calendar as “myths,” we treat them as an alternate scientific language—an encoded physics manual written in blood, obsidian, and prophecy. Time loops become closed timelike curves hidden in sacrificial narratives. The quantum observer effect becomes Tezcatlipoca’s smoking mirror deciding which reality solidifies when we dare to look. Retrocausality and delayed-choice experiments become the gods rewriting history from the future.

Across these monologues, we ask: What if the Aztec priest staring into a polished black mirror was doing the same thing as a modern physicist staring into a detector—collapsing wavefunctions with ritual and attention? What if human sacrifice, the New Fire Ceremony, and journeys through Mictlan were archetypal descriptions of entropy, black holes, information paradoxes, and cosmic reboot cycles? And what if our entire universe behaves like a divination ritual in progress, where every observation is a cut into the fabric of possibility, and every experiment is a prayer that binds past and future into a single, self-consistent knot?

If you’re interested in hardcore conceptual bridges between ancient spirituality and cutting-edge science—Aztec cosmology, quantum theory, multiverse speculation, simulation theory, and the physics of fate—this is your invitation to sit down, listen closely, and let the Feathered Serpent and the Smoking Mirror argue with Einstein and Schrödinger in the back of your mind. Like, share, and subscribe if you want more long-form monologues that treat mythology as advanced code, not primitive superstition.

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