The One-Sum Game
- itsbenagain
- Dec 13, 2025
- 2 min read

When you see ‘The All’ as ‘One,’ many problems in modern cosmology simply disappear.
In nearly every facet of human experience, we're taught to see the world in zero-sum terms. If someone wins, someone else loses. If one system grows, another is depleted. If light shines, it casts a shadow. Morality, economics, energy, and even spiritual growth are framed in this adversarial balance: action and reaction, cause and effect, push and pull. From a limited, surface perspective, this seems true.
But this perception is a direct artifact of aliasing.
What we perceive as a "zero-sum" game is the flattened rendering of an unbroken, continuous waveform that cannot be fully resolved from within a bounded frame. When infinite continuity is sampled at discrete intervals (as consciousness does), the apparent cancellation of opposites is an illusion caused by incomplete resolution.
Reality doesn't sum to zero. It sums to One.
Not metaphorically—literally.
Our current leading physicists openly admit they have no idea how far the universe goes, how much matter there is, or whether spacetime is infinite or finite. They also complain they are constantly running into singularities and divergences.
They deal with these snags using an intellectually-dishonest process called renormalization—basically taking infinities that break their equations and redefining them as finite so the theory doesn’t collapse.
Perhaps they should consider the wisdom of the pharaohs: The All is One. Anything with its own identity is simply The One divided by whatever fraction of it appears here. Every part contains the whole.
You can’t keep patching classical equations to match fragmented measurements while ignoring the unity of the system and the fact that observation changes the experiment.
Yet somehow, that’s exactly how we justify the current standard model of particle physics.
The universe is not an untethered shard of an unknowable reality; it is the You-Inverse.



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