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Theoretical Physicists Finding Mathematical Structures Outside Spacetime Since 2013

Lewis Howes School of Greatness · Evolution Designed Your Senses to Hide Reality | Donald Hoffman · June 15, 2026
Theoretical Physicists Finding Mathematical Structures Outside Spacetime Since 2013
Lewis Howes School of Greatness
Lewis Howes School of Greatness
Evolution Designed Your Senses to Hide Reality | Donald Hoffman
"The European Research Council, the ERC, has a €10 million initiative right now, and there are many, many high-energy theoretical physicists and mathematicians that are finding what are called positive geometries outside of spacetime. So there are new mathematical structures that code for properties of particle interactions inside spacetime beautifully."
Hoffman reveals that since 2013, high-energy theoretical physicists have been discovering positive geometries—mathematical structures existing outside spacetime—that predict particle interactions with precision. This represents a paradigm shift in physics, as researchers now work entirely outside quantum theory and spacetime frameworks, funded by a €10 million European Research Council initiative.

About this episode

In this paradigm-challenging episode, host Lewis Howes interviews cognitive scientist and UC Irvine professor Donald Hoffman about the nature of reality, consciousness, and perception. Hoffman, who has spent over 40 years studying how humans perceive reality, presents a radical thesis: evolutionary mathematics proves with absolute certainty that humans never evolved to see reality as it is, but rather to navigate a survival game through what he calls a 'VR headset' interface. Drawing on high-energy theoretical physics research from the past decade, Hoffman explains how physicists have discovered mathematical structures called positive geometries existing outside spacetime, funded by a €10 million European Research Council initiative. He dismantles the physicalist assumption that brains create consciousness, arguing instead that consciousness creates the brain and that physical objects—including neurons—only exist when perceived. Hoffman proposes that one universal consciousness experiences reality through infinite avatars across countless dimensional headsets, with our three-dimensional spacetime being among the most trivial. The conversation becomes deeply practical as Hoffman shares meditation techniques for stepping back from emotional identification, drawing parallels between adult frustrations and a child losing a toy in a sandbox. He reveals his personal practice of spending tens of thousands of hours in silence to cultivate the 'watcher' perspective. Hoffman's forthcoming Trace Institute, launching June 3rd, aims to develop mathematical models showing how spacetime emerges from consciousness—research he believes will enable technologies that make current innovations look like firecrackers. Throughout, he addresses scientific pushback, clarifies why neuroscience remains important despite brains lacking causal power, and explains how DMT might alter dimensional parameters in our perceptual headset. The episode closes with Hoffman's three truths: love is central, you were the author all along, and infinite headsets await.

Key takeaways

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