The Hubble Tension as a Signature of Psychegenesis: A Two-Phase Cosmology Model with Collapse at 555 Million Years Ago
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Description
The persistent discrepancy between early- and late-universe measurements of the Hubble constant — the so-called Hubble tension — remains unresolved within the ΛCDM paradigm, motivating new cosmological frameworks. In this paper, we show that the observed Hubble tension can be naturally explained as a metric artifact of psychegenesis, the irreversible emergence of conscious observers, in the context of Two-Phase Cosmology (2PC).
In 2PC, the universe begins in a coherent, pre-physical quantum phase, with collapse into classical spacetime initiated only when an observer-system crosses the Quantum Convergence Threshold (QCT) — a sharp, information-theoretic phase transition. We identify this transition with the appearance of Ikaria wariootia, a bilaterian organism dated to approximately 555 million years ago, marking the beginning of the classical universe in this model.
We show that a retroactive, sigmoid-shaped metric correction associated with this transition predicts a present-day Hubble parameter shift of precisely the observed
magnitude, assuming collapse occurred at 555 Mya. This correction naturally explains the discrepancy between CMB-derived and supernova-derived values of , without requiring new physics in the early universe. Our findings suggest that the Hubble tension is not an observational anomaly, but a falsifiable signature of cosmological phase transition — specifically, the onset of observed reality itself.
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Related works
- Cites
- Publication: 10.5281/zenodo.15618749 (DOI)
- 10.5281/zenodo.15623628 (DOI)
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- Created
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2025-06-27