Hacking the Universe (Not From Earth)

Hacking the Universe (Not From Earth)

by Robert Adamson

AI & Semantics
Amazon:β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…4.2(71)
Goodreads:β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…4.22(18)
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Added on March 17, 2026

Description

Hacking the Universe is an investigation that just might expose the biggest story of all time. Silicon Valley Billionaires have secret plans to live forever.This article predicted that Elon Musk would make an offer for Twitter. The reason is not what you might think.If we are living in a simulation, as they believe, hacking the simulation changes everything. The ramifications of such a hack are mind-boggling. Programmers could change the very laws of physics and reality. Time travel, aging, and instant transportation are all possible because those things are just code and data.** Excerpts **Imagine a new startup that offers on-sight virtual reality tours. You enter their futuristic building by the San Francisco Bay and select a destination in time and place. You choose Ancient Rome. Next, you buy your ticket, and they dress you with their latest Simulated Reality equipment. Suddenly, you find yourself standing by the original Flavian Amphitheater in the center of ancient Rome and your adventure begins.Einstein and Bohr had a great debate at The Solvay Conference in Belgium in 1927. Here was a gathering of some of the most intelligent people on Earth.Bohr was right. Our universe is more like computer data than matter, separated by space and time. If nothing can traverse space faster than the speed of light, then instantaneous entanglement would be impossible.

Reader Reviews

β˜…β˜…β˜…Emilie Rose Thiessen

Interesting dive into an important topicHacking the Universe was definitely an interesting read. It addresses some pretty intense topics, which is always fascinating to me. I learned some wild stuff like Larry Ellison owning 98 percent of the island of Lanai. I had to look it up because I didn't believe it, but sure enough, he does. So anytime I learn something new, I really appreciate that.It breaks down for me, however, when the claims come up largely unsubstantiated and the sources are weak.

β˜…β˜…β˜…Richie Demox

an idea with potential This is a very short work, more like a leaflet. Clearly the author is tapping into a very interesting and prescient idea, and the possible consequences of such an idea has a very strong imaginative draw. I would be interested in reading fiction the writer choose to extrude from the notions raised here. Without taking the time or space to dive deep into any one of the stories alluded to here, there isn’t really the opportunity experience or reflect on them, but if the autho

β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…Karen Inkle

Complex but interesting read! Written by a computer programmer, this short and extremely informative book looks at the different views, angles and theories given by various famous and scientific people regarding the universe and the stimulation theory. I struggled a little to understand it and so had to read it a few times over. It's quite a deep and complex book but that doesn't mean to say that people with science and physics as an interest won't enjoy. They surely will and it certainly makes

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Mar 17, 2026First seenFREE