Is your life a cosmic hallucination? Explore why physics suggests you might be a brain in the void and how entropy shapes our reality.

A lone brain, floating in the void, complete with false memories of a childhood that never existed, is 'cheaper' in terms of entropy than an entire functioning cosmos. If the theory says most observers are Boltzmann Brains, and we think we’re not, then either we’re incredibly lucky, or the theory is wrong.
Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco

Lena: You know, Nia, I was looking at some old childhood photos this morning—those classic birthday parties with the blown-out candles—and it felt so real. But it made me wonder: how do we actually know those memories aren't just a glitch?
Nia: That is the ultimate "what if," isn't it? It leads straight into the Boltzmann Brain paradox. It’s this unsettling idea from statistical physics that suggests you might not be a human being with a 13.8-billion-year cosmic history. Instead, you could be a momentary fluctuation in the void—a single conscious brain that flickered into existence a nanosecond ago with a full set of fake memories.
Lena: So, the "me" sitting here could just be a cosmic hallucination that’s about to dissolve?
Nia: Exactly. According to the math of entropy, it’s actually statistically more likely for a lone brain to spontaneously pop out of the chaos than for an entire structured universe to exist.
Lena: That is absolutely vertigo-inducing. Let’s break down how the laws of thermodynamics actually lead us to such a wild conclusion.