Do we know any property of the Universe that is so fundamental that it is impossible to explain why it is the case?

"our sense of self is individuated"

nothing else is undeniably and provably separable except the divide between self and other. every one of our observations comes intrinsically mixed with this tension, that there is a self that holds the observation and it is an observation of an outside, "other". every other thing, every other separation we measure or think we experience is conjured by our definitions and stories and norms. In fact, nothing in physics can prove there is only one external existence, rather than every self having a separate but aligned and communicating external other.

We all think we're individuated selves with only one outside reality, but it it far more likely that there is only one actual self (a living thing called 'the Universe'), and we each experience a different 'frame' or context on separate outside "realities" that are just also views of (and into) the same Universal self from different persepctives.

people figured this all out thousands of years ago and physics can't seem to integrate it, at all.

/r/Physics Thread