J. Rogers, SE Ohio
There is a scene early in The Matrix where Morpheus offers Neo a choice. Red pill or blue pill. Stay in the comfortable, detailed, navigable world — or wake up and see what is actually there.
Physics has been offered that choice for a hundred years. It keeps taking the blue pill.
The Beautiful World
The matrix is beautifully filmed. Warm colors. Rich textures. Familiar geometry. It feels like reality because it was constructed to feel like reality.
The SI unit system is beautifully constructed. Kilograms. Meters. Seconds. Joules. Constants measured to ten significant figures. Equations dressed in familiar symbols — E = mc², E = hf, F = Gm₁m₂/r². It feels like physics because it was constructed to feel like physics.
Inside this world everything makes sense. Energy connects to mass through c². Energy connects to frequency through h. Energy connects to temperature through k_B. The silos — quantum mechanics, relativity, thermodynamics, electromagnetism — each have their own beautiful equations, their own constants, their own internal consistency.
It is a good world to do engineering in. It is a good world to make predictions in. It works.
It is not the real world.
What the Real World Looks Like
The real world in The Matrix is stark. Cold. Shot in harsh blue-grey light. No comfortable textures. No warm colors. Just the raw fact of what is actually there.
The real world underneath the unit system is equally stark.
It is a single dimensionless number.
Call it X.
X is the ratio of a physical configuration to the whole universe. Part divided by whole. That is all. No units. No constants. No kilograms or meters or Babylonian seconds. Just the geometry of this thing against the geometry of everything.
Every physical quantity — mass, energy, frequency, temperature, momentum, wavelength — when you strip away the arbitrary unit scaling, resolves to X. The same X. One number. One ratio. The same geometry approached from different directions using different invented measuring systems.
This is not a philosophical position. It is an algebraic fact. Take E/E_P and m/m_P and f·t_P and T/T_P and l_P/λ and p/p_P. Compute them for any physical state. They are all equal. They are all X.
The fifteen fundamental laws of physics — E = mc², E = hf, E = k_BT, λ = h/p, c = fλ, and eleven others — are not independent discoveries. They are what you get when you take the single identity X = X and express it pairwise through different pairs of invented unit axes. The constants h, c, G, k_B are the conversion factors between those axes. They are not fundamental features of the universe. They are the price of having invented incompatible unit systems independently and then needing to translate between them.
That is the real world. Stark. Simple. Undecorated.
The Babylonian Second
Here is where it gets uncomfortable.
The constants — h, c, G, k_B — have specific numerical values. Those values depend on the SI units. And the SI units trace back, through a chain that nobody in physics follows to its end, to a single origin point.
The Babylonian second.
Four thousand years ago, Babylonian astronomers divided the astronomical day into 24 hours. Each hour into 60 minutes. Each minute into 60 seconds. 86,400 seconds per day. The numbers 24 and 60 were chosen for administrative convenience — 60 is divisible by many small numbers, useful for fractional arithmetic before decimals existed.
No physics forced this choice. The universe did not decree that there should be 86,400 seconds in a day. Conscious beings decided.
The meter was defined in 1983 as the distance light travels in 1/299,792,458 of a second. The second is Babylonian, so the meter is Babylonian in disguise.
The kilogram was redefined in 2019 by fixing the numerical value of h to exactly 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ kg·m²·s⁻¹. The kilogram, the meter, and the second are all in the units of h — so the kilogram is Babylonian in disguise, twice removed.
h, c, and G are monomials built from the Planck unit standards, which are built from kg, m, and s, which are built from the Babylonian second.
The fundamental constants of nature are Babylonian astronomy in mathematical disguise.
If the Babylonians had divided the day into 100,000 parts instead of 86,400, h would have a different numerical value. c would have a different numerical value. G would have a different numerical value. The physics would be identical. X would be unchanged. Only the matrix would look different.
The Agents of the Matrix
When Neo starts to see through the matrix, the agents appear. Suited, implacable, defending the constructed world against the intrusion of the real one.
In physics, the agents are not villains. They are the framework itself. They are the habits of thought that the training pipeline installs before anyone is old enough to notice them being installed.
You learn to use units before you learn to ask what units are. You learn to manipulate constants before you learn to ask what constants are. By the time you are doing research, the questions "what is a kilogram really?" and "what is h really?" feel naive — the kind of thing a first-year student asks before they understand. The training has made the questions unthinkable, not by suppression but by absorption. You are taught to work inside the matrix so thoroughly that the matrix stops feeling like a matrix.
And then when someone points at X — when someone says the constants are Jacobian conversion factors between independently-invented unit axes, that the physics is always and only the dimensionless ratio, that the Babylonian second is sitting inside h — the response is not engagement. It is:
"But eventually you have to return to the real world to do measurement."
Meaning: return to SI units. Return to kilograms and meters and seconds. As if the Babylonian astronomical convention is the real world. As if the platinum cylinder that used to sit in a vault in Paris was physical reality itself. As if the invented standard is the territory rather than the measuring stick.
That response is the agent. It defends the matrix not with argument but with the assumption that the matrix is reality. You cannot argue someone out of a position they do not know they are holding.
What Measurement Actually Is
Measurement is not a feature of the universe. The universe does not measure anything.
Measurement is a ritual that conscious beings perform. It has a precise structure:
Step 1. Invent an arbitrary conventional standard. Choose a rock, a cylinder of metal, a fraction of the Earth's circumference, a division of the astronomical day. Agree with other conscious beings to call it the unit. This is a deliberate act of convention. It could have been different. The physics would be identical.
Step 2. Compare the thing to the standard. But then you need mysterious values with specific units we call constants to allow us to do physics with those arbitrary standards. This is what you are actually accessing in this step is X — the dimensionless geometric ratio of the thing to the universe. The standard is just the ladder you climb to get there. X was always there. It does not depend on which standard you chose.
Step 3. Express the result in the chosen units so other conscious beings using the same conventions can understand it.
Steps 1 and 3 are the matrix. They are the constructed world — rich, detailed, useful, necessary for communication. Step 2 is the real world. It is X. It is what was always there before anyone picked up a rock and declared it to be one kilogram.
A thermometer does not measure temperature. It transduces temperature from a velocity change of particles in a fluid. The measurement happens when a conscious being reads it against a scale whose marks were placed there by other conscious beings who chose water as a reference and divided the interval between its freezing and boiling points into one hundred parts. The thermometer is matrix equipment. The conscious being performing the ritual is the one doing the measurement. The temperature of the system — X — was there before the thermometer existed.
Einstein Saw the Edge
Einstein said it plainly: c² in E = mc² is just a unit conversion factor. Mass and energy are the same thing expressed in different units. The constant is the exchange rate between two independently-invented measurement axes.
He was right. He saw the edge of the matrix, right there, in that one constant.
He could not generalize it. He could not see that h and G and k_B are doing exactly the same thing — each one a conversion factor between two independently-invented axes, each one a Jacobian, each one the fingerprint of a unit mismatch that conscious beings introduced. He had the pattern for c² and lacked the language to ask whether the pattern held across every constant simultaneously.
The siloing prevented it. Inside relativity, E ~ m. Inside quantum mechanics, E ~ f. Inside thermodynamics, E ~ T. Each silo had its own relationship between energy and its own axis. But the statement E ~ f ~ m ~ T ~ p ~ 1/λ — all of them equivalent to each other directly, not just through energy as mediator — was not a statement any silo could make. It crossed too many boundaries.
And even energy — the chosen universal equivalent, the currency that all silos could trade in — is still inside the matrix. The joule is still a unit. Energy is still an invented axis. Making everything equivalent to energy is just choosing one arbitrary axis as the privileged one and calling it real.
X is not equivalent to energy. X is what energy is pointing at, along with mass and frequency and temperature and momentum and wavelength. Strip the unit from any of them and you find X underneath. Energy is the last axis the framework clung to. X is what you find when you let go of that one too.
Physics found energy and stopped. Inside the unit chart. Comfortable. Warm. Beautifully filmed.
The Red Pill
The red pill is not comfortable.
The real world underneath the unit system is stark. One dimensionless ratio. No constants. No Babylonian seconds. No platinum cylinders. No French meridians. Just X — the geometry of this configuration against the geometry of everything — obtaining silently, whether or not any conscious being ever invents a scale to measure it.
The wavefunction — the central object of quantum mechanics — is in the matrix. It is the best map a conscious being can construct of the geometric state of the territory, given only the information available from previous measurement rituals. It evolves continuously between rituals because the map is being updated as time passes. It collapses discontinuously when a ritual is performed because the map is being updated with new information. Neither evolution nor collapse is a physical process in the territory. Both are features of the map.
The measurement problem — the century-long crisis about what measurement is, who counts as an observer, why the wavefunction collapses — is a problem about the matrix, not the territory. It was generated by treating the map as reality. When you see that the wavefunction is in the map and X is in the territory, the problem does not require a new interpretation. It dissolves.
The constants problem — why h, c, G, k_B have the values they have, why gravity is 10³⁸ times weaker than electromagnetism, why the cosmological constant is 10¹²⁰ times smaller than predicted — dissolves the same way. The constants have the values they have because of the specific historical choices made by specific conscious beings at specific historical moments. The hierarchy between gravity and electromagnetism is the ratio X²/em_geom² — the square of the kinematic geometry divided by the square of the electromagnetic geometry. It is not a fine-tuning problem. It is the geometry being what it is, expressed through two independently-invented unit axes that required different Jacobians to access it.
These are not small problems being dissolved. These are two of the deepest open problems in theoretical physics. They dissolve together, from the same move, because they were both generated by the same confusion: the matrix mistaken for the territory.
You Have to Return to the Real World
When people hear this framework they often say: "Fine, but eventually you have to return to the real world to do measurement. You need the units."
Yes. You need the units. The engineer needs kilograms. The experimentalist needs meters. The clock needs seconds. Nobody is arguing otherwise.
But "you need units to perform the measurement ritual" is not the same as "units are physical reality." The matrix is useful. It is necessary for conscious beings to communicate with each other about X. The ritual is how we access the territory. Steps 1 and 3 are not wrong — they are the only way conscious beings can talk to each other about Step 2.
The confusion is not in using units. The confusion is in thinking the units are what is real. In thinking that "the real world" means "SI units." In treating the Babylonian second as a feature of the universe rather than a feature of the ritual.
The matrix is real in the sense that it is the world conscious beings navigate. It is not real in the sense of being the territory. It is the map. A very good map. A map so detailed and so universally agreed upon that it stopped feeling like a map.
Morpheus did not tell Neo to stop eating food or breathing air. He told Neo to see what those things actually were.
The red pill does not destroy the matrix. It shows you what the matrix is made of.
It is made of X.
The Elephant in the Room (Rogers, 2025) establishes the full argument: the constants as Planck Jacobians, the Babylonian origins of the SI system, and X as the invariant geometric reality underlying every unit chart.