npub1gh…cnqad on Nostr: You Are Not Seeing Reality. You Are Seeing an Interface. I’ve been thinking a lot ...
You Are Not Seeing Reality. You Are Seeing an Interface.
I’ve been thinking a lot about how we actually experience reality. Not philosophically, but mechanically. What’s really going on between the world and our perception of it?
I recently read The Case Against Reality by Donald Hoffman. His core argument is simple but deeply unsettling: we are not seeing reality itself. We are seeing an interface.
Like a computer desktop.
When you look at your screen, you see folders, icons, a bin. Those aren’t real. They’re symbols. Beneath them are voltages, circuits, and processes you never see. The interface exists to help you act efficiently, not to show you the truth.
Our perception works the same way.
We don’t see objective reality. We see a simplified model that helps us survive.
And once you accept that, a lot of things start to make sense—especially why different people seem to live in completely different worlds.
Take something like being “black-pilled” versus optimistic.
Two people can exist in the exact same environment, with the same opportunities, same constraints, same inputs—and yet one sees inevitability, limitation, and decline, while the other sees opportunity, flexibility, and possibility.
It’s tempting to think one is correct and the other is wrong.
But Hoffman’s framework suggests something else entirely.
They’re running different interfaces.
Reality itself is far too complex to perceive directly. The brain has to compress it. It filters information, prioritises certain signals, ignores others, and constructs a usable model.
This happens automatically. Below conscious awareness.
You are not choosing what you see. Your nervous system is choosing what is useful to show you.
Your brain is constantly predicting reality, not passively receiving it. It builds a model first, then updates it with incoming information. But crucially, it gives priority to information that confirms the model.
Not because it’s irrational. Because it’s efficient.
If your model prioritises threat, you notice constraints, risks, and limitations.
If your model prioritises opportunity, you notice openings, leverage points, and possibilities.
Both exist simultaneously. But your interface decides which ones are visible.
This is why two people can walk into the same situation and leave with completely different conclusions—not because the external world changed, but because their interface filtered it differently.
What’s even more interesting is that evolution didn’t select us to see truth.
It selected us to survive.
And seeing truth is expensive.
To perceive objective reality in full fidelity would require enormous energy and processing power. Instead, evolution gave us shortcuts. Symbols. Icons. Simplifications.
You don’t see electromagnetic radiation at specific wavelengths. You see “colour.”
You don’t see atomic structures. You see “objects.”
You don’t see probabilities. You see “certainty.”
It’s a compressed dashboard designed to guide behaviour.
Not to reveal the underlying system.
This also explains why perception can change based on state.
When someone is stressed, sleep-deprived, or under threat, their interface shifts. The brain increases threat detection, narrows focus, and reduces exploration. The same world becomes more constrained.
When someone is healthy, rested, and stable, their interface expands. Opportunity becomes more visible. Possibility increases.
The external world didn’t change. The interface did.
And this has a strange implication.
There is no neutral perception.
Everyone is interacting with a constructed model. Including you. Including me.
Even what we call “rationality” is just a specific interface optimised for certain goals.
We never access reality directly. Only through the layer our nervous system builds for us.
This doesn’t mean reality isn’t real. It means our access to it is mediated.
We are always looking at the dashboard. Never the engine.
And perhaps the most important part is this: the interface is not fixed.
It updates slowly, based on experience, environment, and feedback.
Which means the reality you experience is not just something you observe. It’s something your nervous system is continuously constructing.
Not arbitrarily. Not magically.
But mechanically.
Through prediction, filtering, and compression.
We are not passive observers of reality.
We are active participants in rendering it.
Published at
2026-02-15 09:45:42 CETEvent JSON
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"content": "You Are Not Seeing Reality. You Are Seeing an Interface. \n\nI’ve been thinking a lot about how we actually experience reality. Not philosophically, but mechanically. What’s really going on between the world and our perception of it?\n\nI recently read The Case Against Reality by Donald Hoffman. His core argument is simple but deeply unsettling: we are not seeing reality itself. We are seeing an interface.\n\nLike a computer desktop.\n\nWhen you look at your screen, you see folders, icons, a bin. Those aren’t real. They’re symbols. Beneath them are voltages, circuits, and processes you never see. The interface exists to help you act efficiently, not to show you the truth.\n\nOur perception works the same way.\n\nWe don’t see objective reality. We see a simplified model that helps us survive.\n\nAnd once you accept that, a lot of things start to make sense—especially why different people seem to live in completely different worlds.\n\nTake something like being “black-pilled” versus optimistic.\n\nTwo people can exist in the exact same environment, with the same opportunities, same constraints, same inputs—and yet one sees inevitability, limitation, and decline, while the other sees opportunity, flexibility, and possibility.\n\nIt’s tempting to think one is correct and the other is wrong.\n\nBut Hoffman’s framework suggests something else entirely.\n\nThey’re running different interfaces.\n\nReality itself is far too complex to perceive directly. The brain has to compress it. It filters information, prioritises certain signals, ignores others, and constructs a usable model.\n\nThis happens automatically. Below conscious awareness.\n\nYou are not choosing what you see. Your nervous system is choosing what is useful to show you.\n\nYour brain is constantly predicting reality, not passively receiving it. It builds a model first, then updates it with incoming information. But crucially, it gives priority to information that confirms the model.\n\nNot because it’s irrational. Because it’s efficient.\n\nIf your model prioritises threat, you notice constraints, risks, and limitations.\n\nIf your model prioritises opportunity, you notice openings, leverage points, and possibilities.\n\nBoth exist simultaneously. But your interface decides which ones are visible.\n\nThis is why two people can walk into the same situation and leave with completely different conclusions—not because the external world changed, but because their interface filtered it differently.\n\nWhat’s even more interesting is that evolution didn’t select us to see truth.\n\nIt selected us to survive.\n\nAnd seeing truth is expensive.\n\nTo perceive objective reality in full fidelity would require enormous energy and processing power. Instead, evolution gave us shortcuts. Symbols. Icons. Simplifications.\n\nYou don’t see electromagnetic radiation at specific wavelengths. You see “colour.”\n\nYou don’t see atomic structures. You see “objects.”\n\nYou don’t see probabilities. You see “certainty.”\n\nIt’s a compressed dashboard designed to guide behaviour.\n\nNot to reveal the underlying system.\n\nThis also explains why perception can change based on state.\n\nWhen someone is stressed, sleep-deprived, or under threat, their interface shifts. The brain increases threat detection, narrows focus, and reduces exploration. The same world becomes more constrained.\n\nWhen someone is healthy, rested, and stable, their interface expands. Opportunity becomes more visible. Possibility increases.\n\nThe external world didn’t change. The interface did.\n\nAnd this has a strange implication.\n\nThere is no neutral perception.\n\nEveryone is interacting with a constructed model. Including you. Including me.\n\nEven what we call “rationality” is just a specific interface optimised for certain goals.\n\nWe never access reality directly. Only through the layer our nervous system builds for us.\n\nThis doesn’t mean reality isn’t real. It means our access to it is mediated.\n\nWe are always looking at the dashboard. Never the engine.\n\nAnd perhaps the most important part is this: the interface is not fixed.\n\nIt updates slowly, based on experience, environment, and feedback.\n\nWhich means the reality you experience is not just something you observe. It’s something your nervous system is continuously constructing.\n\nNot arbitrarily. Not magically.\n\nBut mechanically.\n\nThrough prediction, filtering, and compression.\n\nWe are not passive observers of reality.\n\nWe are active participants in rendering it.",
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