Selective Living, Temporal Compression, and the Mechanism of Collapse: A Perspective-Based Model within Javed's Quantum Thought
Description
This paper presents a perspective-based model explaining why modern human experience feels increasingly accelerated despite time itself remaining unchanged. It argues that continuous conscious selection of moments—rather than natural reception—produces temporal compression, reaction-based cognition, and an illusion of control.
Within the framework of Javed’s Quantum Thought, the paper clarifies the concept of collapse not as a causal outcome of human intention, but as a perceptual visibility that emerges when perception stabilizes through acceptance. Human intention does not create or alter reality; it determines perceptual position within an already complete structure.
Using a cause–effect model grounded in the concept of divine command (Kun), the paper explains why reality cannot be replicated, accelerated, or controlled through choice, despite persistent appearances of agency. The discussion integrates temporal perception, selection-based living, hidden parameters, and the limits of replication, offering a coherent explanation for temporal compression and perceptual collapse without attributing creative power to human decision.
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Selected time.pdf
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