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Sunday, April 12, 2026

You Are Living in the Matrix. It Is Called the SI Unit System.

 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.

The Measurement Problem Dissolved: Conscious Beings as the Inventors of Arbitrary Scales

 J. Rogers, SE Ohio


Abstract

The measurement problem in quantum mechanics has resisted resolution for a century. Every interpretation — Copenhagen, Many Worlds, decoherence, relational quantum mechanics, QBism — shares a hidden assumption: that measurement is a physical process governed by physical law, something that happens inside the universe. This paper argues that the assumption is the problem. Measurement is not a physical process in the universe. It is a specific ritual: the invention of an arbitrary standard and the comparison of a thing to that standard. Only conscious beings perform this ritual — not because they have special metaphysical properties, but because inventing and agreeing on arbitrary conventions is a functional capacity that rocks, thermometers, and orbiting planets do not have. Physics is not about measurement. Physics is about geometric relationships that simply are, independent of whether any conscious being ever invents a scale to measure them. The wavefunction is a feature of the map. X — the dimensionless geometric ratio of part to whole universe — is a feature of the territory. When this distinction is made precise, the measurement problem does not require a new interpretation. It dissolves.


1. The Problem as Usually Stated

The measurement problem arises from a collision between two claims that quantum mechanics appears to make simultaneously.

The first claim is that physical systems evolve according to the Schrödinger equation — a linear, deterministic, continuous evolution of the wavefunction. A particle in a superposition of spin-up and spin-down remains in superposition. The evolution is smooth and total. Nothing singles out one outcome.

The second claim is that when a measurement is performed, a definite outcome occurs. The particle is found spin-up or spin-down, not both. The wavefunction appears to collapse discontinuously to one branch. The probabilities given by Born's rule are confirmed experimentally to extraordinary precision.

These two claims are in direct tension. The Schrödinger equation does not produce collapse. Collapse does not follow from the Schrödinger equation. Something additional is being assumed when measurement happens, and the framework cannot say what that something is.

A century of interpretation has been devoted to resolving this tension without abandoning either claim. None of the resolutions have succeeded in a way that commands consensus. This paper argues that the reason they have all failed is that they all accept the hidden assumption that generates the problem.


2. The Hidden Assumption

Every major interpretation of quantum mechanics assumes, explicitly or implicitly, that measurement is a physical process — something that happens inside the universe, subject to the same laws as everything else.

Copenhagen says measurement causes collapse, but cannot define what counts as a measurement without invoking a classical observer, which it cannot define without circularity. The cut between quantum system and classical observer is placed arbitrarily and never justified.

Many Worlds eliminates collapse by keeping the full wavefunction always — every outcome happens in some branch. But it cannot explain why an observer experiences one branch rather than all of them simultaneously. The preferred basis problem and the probability problem remain unresolved.

Decoherence explains why quantum superpositions become effectively classical through interaction with the environment. It is a genuine physical insight. But it explains the appearance of collapse, not the selection of a definite outcome. An observer still finds one result, and decoherence does not say which one or why.

Relational quantum mechanics says the wavefunction is relative to an observer, and different observers can have different valid descriptions. But it cannot say what an observer is without circularity.

QBism says the wavefunction represents the beliefs of an agent and collapse is a belief update. This is closest to the position developed here, but QBism does not precisely define what an agent is or what makes belief-updating different from any other physical correlation.

The shared assumption running through all of these is: measurement is in the territory. It is a physical interaction, a decoherence event, a branching of the wavefunction, an update of physical states. It is something the universe does.

This paper denies that assumption. And it provides a precise, functional criterion for what measurement actually is — one that requires no appeal to qualia, subjectivity, or mysterious consciousness.


3. What Measurement Actually Is

Measurement is the invention of an arbitrary standard and the comparison of a thing to that standard.

This is the complete definition. It requires nothing mysterious. It is a functional criterion that cleanly separates measurement from every other physical process.

The procedure has three steps, always:

Step 1 — Invent and apply an arbitrary unit standard. A conscious being chooses a standard — a particular cylinder of platinum-iridium, a division of the astronomical day, a fraction of the Earth's meridian — and agrees with other conscious beings to treat it as the unit. This is a conventional act. It requires deliberate choice. It requires the capacity to establish and follow a shared convention. The standard is arbitrary: it could have been different. The Babylonians could have divided the day into 100,000 parts. The French committee could have chosen the seconds pendulum instead of the meridian. The physics would be identical. The unit would be different.

Step 2 — The pure geometric ratio exists. When the thing is compared to the standard, what is actually being accessed is a dimensionless geometric relationship — the ratio of the thing to the standard. This relationship was always there. It did not come into existence because of the measurement. It does not depend on the conscious being performing the ritual. It does not depend on which arbitrary standard was chosen. Strip the standard away — divide out the unit scaling — and what remains is X, the pure geometric ratio of this configuration to the whole universe. X is in the territory. X simply is.

Step 3 — Record in output units. The result is expressed in the chosen units so it can be communicated, compared, and used by other conscious beings operating under the same conventions.

Steps 1 and 3 are the ritual. They are what conscious beings do. They require the capacity to invent, agree on, and apply arbitrary conventions. Step 2 is the territory. It is what is there whether or not any conscious being ever invents a scale to access it.


4. The Thermometer Does Not Measure

The thermometer is the clearest illustration of the distinction.

A thermometer does not measure temperature. It transduces temperature — it converts a physical effect (mercury expansion) into a spatial position (height of mercury in a tube). This is a purely physical process. No standard is invented. No convention is established. No ratio is deliberately constructed. The thermometer is part of the territory.  The thermometer does not measure, it just is.

The measurement happens when a conscious being reads the thermometer. The marks on the glass — 0°C, 100°C, the divisions between — were placed there by conscious beings who made specific conventional choices. They chose water as the reference substance. They chose its freezing point as zero and its boiling point as one hundred. They divided the interval into one hundred equal parts. They agreed with other conscious beings to use this convention. They calibrated the thermometer against this standard.

The thermometer does not know it is measuring temperature. It does not know what Celsius means. It does not perform Step 1 — the invention of the arbitrary standard — because it cannot invent anything. It merely transduces a change in velocity of particles to an expansion of volume. The conscious being who calibrated it performed Step 1. The conscious being who reads it performs Step 3.

A rock sitting next to the thermometer also transduces temperature — it expands slightly when heated. It is not measuring anything. A thermostat also responds to temperature — it opens and closes a circuit. It is not measuring anything. It is following the convention that a conscious being built into it. It is an instrument of the ritual, not a performer of the ritual.

The criterion is precise and functional: can this entity invent an arbitrary conventional standard and deliberately compare things to it? If yes, it can measure. If no, it is part of the territory — it transduces, responds, interacts — but it does not measure.


5. The Universe Does Not Measure Anything

The universe moves. That is all it does.

Local straight line motion through curved space. Nested orbits, each object tracing a geodesic through the geometry shaped by everything else. No object is calculating its trajectory. No field is measuring the mass that curves it. No particle is observing its own spin state and selecting an outcome. No part of the universe is inventing an arbitrary standard and comparing other parts to it.

The universe just is. Geometric relationships obtaining between configurations. The geometry evolving. Nothing being selected. Nothing being observed. Nothing being measured.

The orbit of a planet around a star obtained before any conscious being existed to observe it. The ratio of the electron mass to the proton mass — approximately 1/1836 — obtained before any conscious being invented the kilogram or the unit of mass. The relationship between a photon's energy and its frequency — E = hf in SI units, X = X in natural geometry — obtained before Planck was born and will obtain after every conscious being is gone.

These are features of the territory. They do not require measurement. They do not require a standard. They do not require a convention. They simply are.

Measurement is what happens when a part of the universe — a conscious being with the functional capacity to invent arbitrary standards — constructs a ratio between a physical configuration and a chosen unit. The ratio accesses the territory. The unit is the map. The territory was there before the map and will be there after.


6. What Conscious Beings Are, Precisely

In this framework, a conscious being is not defined by qualia, subjectivity, or any mysterious inner property. It is defined functionally:

A conscious being is an entity that can invent arbitrary conventional standards and use them to construct ratios with physical quantities.

This is a high bar. It excludes rocks. It excludes thermometers. It excludes thermostats. It excludes planets. It excludes every purely physical transduction process.

It includes humans. It includes any sufficiently sophisticated cognitive system that can establish measurement conventions, share them with other such systems, and use them consistently to produce dimensionless ratios — numbers that can be compared, communicated, and built upon.

The invention of the second was a conscious act. Babylonian astronomers looked at the sky, chose the astronomical day as their reference, divided it into 86,400 parts, and agreed among themselves to call each part a second. No physics forced this choice. The universe did not decree that there should be 86,400 seconds in a day. Conscious beings decided.

The invention of the kilogram was a conscious act. French scientists and officials chose a cylinder of platinum-iridium and declared it to be the unit of mass. Nothing in the universe required this. Conscious beings decided.

The invention of the meter was a conscious act. French scientists chose one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole along the Paris meridian. They could have chosen the seconds pendulum — approximately 0.994 meters — and gotten nearly the same result. Either way, conscious beings decided.

All of the physical constants — h, c, G, k_B — carry the fingerprints of these decisions. They are conversion factors between measurement axes that conscious beings defined independently and arbitrarily. Their specific numerical values depend on the Babylonian second, the French meter, the platinum-iridium kilogram. Change any of those conventions and the numerical values of the constants change. The dimensionless X does not change. X is in the territory. The constants are in the map.


7. The Wavefunction Is a Feature of the Map

The wavefunction ψ is not in the territory. It is the best map a conscious being can construct of a physical state given the information available from previous measurements — previous acts of comparing physical quantities to arbitrary standards.

It is a probability amplitude — a compact encoding of what outcomes the conscious being should expect if they perform various future measurement rituals, weighted by Born's rule. It is maximally useful for predicting the results of future rituals. It is not a description of what the territory is doing between rituals.

Between measurements, the territory is just geometric relationships obtaining. The electron is not in a superposition of spin-up and spin-down waiting to be collapsed. It is in a particular geometric state. When a conscious being invents a spin-measurement apparatus — a device calibrated against a conventional standard for "spin-up" and "spin-down" — and performs the ritual, the result will be one outcome. The probability of each outcome is given by Born's rule applied to the wavefunction.

The superposition is in the map. It reflects the conscious being's uncertainty about the geometric state of the territory, given only the information available from previous rituals. The geometry itself is not uncertain. The map is uncertain because the ritual has limited resolution — it cannot access the territory directly, only through the mediation of invented standards.

When the measurement is performed and a result is obtained, the wavefunction collapses. This is not the universe doing something. It is the conscious being updating the map. The arbitrary standard was applied. A ratio was produced. New information was obtained. The map was revised to reflect that information. The territory did not collapse. The territory was always in a definite geometric state. The map — which was uncertain because conscious beings have limited access to the territory — became less uncertain.

Wavefunction collapse is a map update following a measurement ritual. It is the consequence of a conscious being successfully comparing a physical quantity to an arbitrary standard and obtaining a definite ratio. It is not a physical process in the universe.


8. The Measurement Problem Dissolved

Return now to the measurement problem.

The tension was: the Schrödinger equation says evolution is continuous and linear, but measurement produces discontinuous collapse to a definite outcome. How can both be true?

The resolution is: they are describing different things.

The Schrödinger equation describes the evolution of the map — the wavefunction — as time passes between measurement rituals. It is the correct equation for updating the conscious being's probability assignments when no new arbitrary-standard-to-physical-quantity comparison is being performed. It is a feature of the map. It governs how the map evolves when no new information from the territory is being obtained.

Collapse describes what happens when a measurement ritual is performed — when a conscious being successfully compares a physical quantity to an arbitrary standard and obtains a definite ratio. The map is updated discontinuously because new information has arrived. This is not a physical process in the territory. It is a map update triggered by a ritual act.

There is no tension. The Schrödinger equation governs continuous map evolution between rituals. Collapse governs discontinuous map update during rituals. Both are features of the map. Neither is a feature of the territory.

In the territory, nothing collapses. The territory is geometric relationships obtaining — X, evolving through nested orbits, local straight line motion through curved space. No superposition. No collapse. No preferred basis problem. No branching. No observer required. No arbitrary standard required.

The measurement problem was generated by treating the map as territory — by assuming the wavefunction was a physical thing in the universe that the universe itself acts on during measurement. Remove that assumption, replace it with the precise functional definition of measurement as the invention and application of arbitrary standards, and the problem does not require a new interpretation.

It dissolves.


9. What Remains

What remains when the measurement problem dissolves is a clean picture with two distinct layers.

The territory is pure geometry. Geometric relationships between configurations. X = part/whole, the dimensionless ratio of each configuration to the whole universe, the only non-arbitrary reference. Particles as transducers between different geometric fields. Force as the product of local field intensities. Orbits as straight lines through curved geometry. No fixed frames. No intrinsic properties. No invented standards. No measurement. The geometry simply is.

The map is what conscious beings construct from the ritual. Wavefunctions, coordinates, unit systems, constants, physical laws written in SI units with Babylonian seconds and French meters and platinum-iridium kilograms embedded in them. The map is maximally useful for prediction and communication among conscious beings who share the same conventions. It is not a description of the territory. It is a description of the ratios produced when the territory is compared against the invented standards.

The constants — h, c, G, k_B — live in the map. They are the Jacobian correction factors needed to convert between measurement axes that conscious beings invented independently. Their numerical values encode the specific arbitrary choices made by specific conscious beings at specific historical moments: the Babylonians dividing the day, the French committee measuring the meridian, the metrologists weighing the platinum cylinder. Change those choices and the constants change. X does not change.

Conscious beings are the part of the territory that constructs maps of the territory. They are physical configurations — made of electrons, protons, neutrons, arranged in specific geometric relationships — that have developed the functional capacity to invent arbitrary conventional standards and use them to produce dimensionless ratios. They are the universe's capacity for self-description, not because the universe is conscious, but because the universe has produced, through geometric evolution, configurations that perform the measurement ritual.

The universe does not measure. Conscious beings measure. Conscious beings are in the universe. So the universe contains measurement without performing it.


10. Conclusion

The measurement problem is not a problem about quantum mechanics. It is a problem about what measurement is.

Measurement is the invention of an arbitrary standard and the comparison of a thing to that standard. This is a functional definition requiring no appeal to qualia or subjective experience. A thermometer does not measure — it transduces. A planet does not measure — it orbits. A conscious being measures because it can invent the Celsius scale, agree on the kilogram, divide the day into 86,400 parts, and use these invented standards to construct ratios with physical quantities.

Once measurement is correctly identified as this specific ritual — performed by entities with the functional capacity to invent and apply arbitrary conventions — the apparent tension between unitary evolution and collapse dissolves. They describe different things. Unitary evolution describes map updating between rituals. Collapse describes map updating during rituals. Neither is a physical process in the universe.

The universe does not measure anything. It moves. Local straight line motion through curved nested geometry. X = part/whole, the geometric ratio of each configuration to the whole, evolving through time without observation, without collapse, without preferred basis, without branching, without anyone inventing a unit standard to access it.

The wavefunction is in the map. X is in the territory.

The measurement problem was the mistake of looking for X in the wavefunction — of treating the map as territory, of treating the ritual as physics.

X was never in the wavefunction. X was always in the geometry, silent and complete, indifferent to whether any conscious being ever invented an arbitrary scale to measure it.

The Babylonian second is in the map. The platinum kilogram is in the map. The French meter is in the map. The constants that encode all of these choices are in the map.

X is not. X simply is.


This paper is a companion to The Elephant in the Room (Rogers, 2025), which establishes that the physical constants are Planck Jacobians encoding the arbitrary unit scaling choices of conscious beings, and that X — the dimensionless geometric ratio of part to whole universe — is the invariant physical quantity that all measurement rituals are attempting to access.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

The Babylonian Second: How an Ancient Time Convention Became the Hidden Axiom of Modern Physics

 J. Rogers, SE Ohio

Abstract

The 2019 redefinition of the SI unit system is presented as a triumph of modern metrology — grounding all units in fixed numerical values of fundamental physical constants. This paper argues that the redefinition, while technically sophisticated, operationally preserves and conceals a far older and more fundamental choice: the Babylonian second. Tracing the historical and operational dependency chain from the current SI system back through the meter and kilogram to the second, and from the second back to the Babylonian sexagesimal division of the astronomical day, we show that the physical constants h, c, and G embed this ancient convention as a hidden axiom. The constants are not features of the territory. They are conversion factors between measurement axes, all of which are ultimately anchored to a time unit that no civilization has ever questioned because it was already universal before the concept of a unit system existed. The fish does not know it is in water.


1. The Question Physics Forbids

Ask a physicist what a kilogram really is and you will receive one of two answers. The first is operational: it is the mass of the International Prototype Kilogram, or since 2019, it is the mass defined by fixing the numerical value of the Planck constant h to exactly 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ kg m² s⁻¹. The second is dismissive: it is the SI base unit of mass, and asking what it really is mistakes a definition for a fact about nature.

Both answers are deflections. The operational answer relocates the question — now you must ask what a meter is, what a second is, what the Planck constant is, and whether any of those answers are less circular than the first. The dismissive answer mistakes the framework's refusal to answer for an absence of question.

This paper takes the question seriously. What is a kilogram really? What is a meter? What is a second? And what happens to the physical constants — h, c, G, k_B — when you follow the dependency chain all the way back to its origin?

The answer is not found in modern metrology. It is found in Babylon.


2. The Second: The Invisible Axiom

2.1 Origin

The second is the oldest surviving unit of measurement still in active scientific use. Its origin is the Babylonian sexagesimal system, developed approximately four thousand years ago. The Babylonians divided the astronomical day into 24 hours — itself inherited from Egyptian timekeeping. Each hour was divided into 60 minutes. Each minute into 60 seconds. The result: 86,400 seconds per day.

The choice of 24 and 60 is entirely arbitrary. Twenty-four was chosen for rough compatibility with the number of observable star groups crossing the sky at night. Sixty was chosen because it is highly composite — divisible by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, and 30 — making fractional arithmetic convenient in a pre-decimal world. These are reasons of administrative and astronomical convenience. They are not features of the universe.

2.2 Transmission

The Babylonian system passed to Greek astronomy, then to Islamic scholarship, then to medieval European timekeeping, then to the scientific revolution. At every stage the second was inherited, not chosen. Newton did not choose the second. He inherited it. Maxwell did not choose the second. He inherited it. Planck did not choose the second. He inherited it, and it became embedded in h.

No civilization has ever replaced the second with a genuinely different time unit for scientific purposes. The French Revolution attempted a decimal time system — 10-hour days, 100-minute hours, 100-second minutes — but it lasted less than two years before being abandoned. The second survived. It has now been the universal scientific time unit for so long that it no longer appears to be a choice. It appears to be a fact.

2.3 The 1967 Redefinition

In 1967, the General Conference on Weights and Measures redefined the second atomically: one second is 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between two hyperfine levels of the ground state of caesium-133. This is presented as a move away from the astronomical second toward a more fundamental definition.

It is not. The number 9,192,631,770 was chosen specifically to match the pre-existing astronomical second as closely as possible. The atomic definition is a high-precision realization of the Babylonian second, not a replacement for it. The arbitrariness of the original choice was preserved and laundered through atomic physics.


3. The Meter: Built on the Second

3.1 The Pendulum Origin

The meter was proposed in 1791 by the French Academy of Sciences as a universal and rational unit of length. Two proposals competed. The first was one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole along the Paris meridian. The second was the length of a pendulum that beats exactly once per second — the seconds pendulum, approximately 0.994 meters at sea level.

The committee chose the meridian definition. But the seconds pendulum proposal, which lost, makes the dependency explicit: the meter was nearly defined directly as a function of the second. The gravitational constant G and the length of a seconds pendulum are related by:

L = g / π²

where L is the pendulum length and g is gravitational acceleration. A meter defined this way would have been a unit of length derived from a unit of time and a measurement of local gravitational geometry.

The meridian definition won, but the result is nearly identical numerically. The meter and the seconds pendulum are within 0.6% of each other. The choice of the meridian did not escape the second — it merely hid the dependency.

3.2 The 1983 Redefinition

In 1983, the meter was redefined explicitly in terms of the second: one meter is the distance traveled by light in vacuum in exactly 1/299,792,458 of a second. This definition fixes the speed of light c to exactly 299,792,458 m s⁻¹.

The dependency is now completely explicit and fully operational. The meter is defined as a fraction of a second times the speed of light. There is no independent meter. There is only the second, a fixed number, and light.

The meter is the second in disguise.


4. The Kilogram: Built on the Meter and Second

4.1 The Original Definition

The kilogram was originally defined in 1795 as the mass of one cubic decimeter of water at its temperature of maximum density (approximately 4°C). One cubic decimeter is one liter. The kilogram is therefore a unit of mass derived from a unit of volume derived from a unit of length derived — through the near-miss of the seconds pendulum — from a unit of time.

The chain is: second → meter → cubic meter → kilogram.

This was explicit in the original design of the metric system. The units were intended to be rationally interconnected, with length and mass both derived from a common foundation. That foundation, in operational practice, was always the second.

4.2 The Kibble Balance and the 2019 Redefinition

The 2019 SI redefinition fixed the numerical values of seven defining constants, including the Planck constant h, the speed of light c, and the elementary charge e. The kilogram is now defined by fixing h to exactly 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ kg m² s⁻¹.

The primary instrument for realizing this definition is the Kibble balance (formerly watt balance), which relates mechanical power to electrical power through quantum electrical standards. The Kibble balance measures h in SI units. The 2019 redefinition then inverts this: it fixes h and uses the Kibble balance to realize the kilogram.

Examine the units of h:

[h] = kg m² s⁻¹

The kilogram appears in the units of h. The definition of the kilogram by fixing h is therefore circular in the following precise sense: h was measured in units that include the kilogram, and the kilogram is now defined by fixing h. The snake eats its tail.

But look more carefully at the units:

[h] = kg m² s⁻¹ = kg · (m² / s)

The meter is defined as c / (299,792,458 s⁻¹), so m² = c² s² / (299,792,458)². Therefore:

[h] = kg · c² s² / (299,792,458)² / s = kg · c² s / (299,792,458)²

Every unit in h resolves to kilograms and seconds. And the meter resolves to seconds. So the full unit dependency of h is kg and s — kilogram and second. Fix h and c together, and the kilogram is entirely determined by the second plus two fixed numbers.

Operationally, the 2019 redefinition defines the kilogram in terms of the second. The constants h and c are the conversion factors that make the accounting explicit.

The kilogram is the second in disguise, twice removed.


5. The Constants as Babylonian Artifacts

5.1 What the Constants Are

If the meter is the second in disguise, and the kilogram is the second in disguise twice removed, then the physical constants — which are defined as numerical relationships between kg, m, and s — are ratios between different disguises of the same underlying time unit.

Consider the three fundamental constants explicitly in terms of the Planck unit standards m_P, l_P, t_P:

c   = l_P / t_P
h   = m_P l_P² / t_P
G   = l_P³ / (t_P² m_P)

Each constant is a monomial in three Planck unit standards. The Planck unit standards are themselves defined from the SI units. And the SI units — kilogram and meter — both resolve operationally to the second.

This means h, c, and G are ultimately ratios of powers of the second, combined with numerical values chosen to bridge between the independently-defined SI axes. Their specific numerical values — 6.626 × 10⁻³⁴, 2.998 × 10⁸, 6.674 × 10⁻¹¹ — depend on the Babylonian choice of 86,400 seconds per day.

If the Babylonians had divided the day into 100,000 equal parts and called each part a second, h, c, and G would have different numerical values. The physics would be identical. The dimensionless ratios — X — would be unchanged. Only the numbers attached to the constants would differ, because those numbers encode the Babylonian convention.

5.2 The Laundering Process

The process by which a Babylonian astronomical convention becomes a fundamental constant of nature has three stages.

First, the convention is inherited so universally and for so long that it ceases to appear as a choice. The second is not chosen by any physicist. It is simply the unit of time. It has been the unit of time for every scientist, in every tradition, for recorded history. It does not feel conventional. It feels like furniture.

Second, the framework accepts the inherited units as primitives — as axioms. In the same way that Euclidean geometry accepts points and lines as primitive and forbids the question "what is a point really?", the SI framework accepts the second, meter, and kilogram as primitive. To ask "what is a second really?" inside the framework is a malformed question. The framework has no mechanism to answer it because it bottoms out there by construction.

Third, the constants are defined as relationships between the axiomatic units. Since the units cannot be questioned, the constants inherit axiomatic status. They become brute facts. They are measured to extraordinary precision, named, given symbols, and treated as features of the territory. The 2019 redefinition elevated them further — they are now definitional, fixed exactly by international agreement. This looks like progress toward fundamentality. It is the opposite. It is the convention being welded shut.

5.3 The Circularity Made Explicit

The 2019 redefinition defines the kilogram by fixing h. The Kibble balance realizes this definition by measuring electrical and mechanical quantities in SI units. The SI units of h include kg m² s⁻¹. The meter is defined by fixing c in m s⁻¹.

Unwind the chain:

kg  → defined by fixing h [kg m² s⁻¹]
m   → defined by fixing c [m s⁻¹]
s   → defined by counting caesium transitions to match the Babylonian second

Every definition points to the second. The second points to Babylon. Babylon points to the astronomical day and the administrative convenience of base-60 arithmetic.

This is not a flaw in the 2019 redefinition. It is the honest structure of any unit system: all chains of definition must terminate somewhere, and that somewhere is always a convention. The flaw is in presenting the chain as if it terminates in something other than a convention — in fundamental constants, in nature itself.

The constants do not terminate the chain. They are links in it.


6. X: What Remains When the Convention Is Removed

6.1 The Dimensionless Ratio

When the arbitrary unit scaling is removed — when the SI quantities are divided by their corresponding Planck unit standards — what remains is a pure dimensionless number. Call it X.

X is the geometric ratio of a physical state to the whole. It is what the measurement was always computing, beneath the layer of unit convention. The equivalence chain makes this explicit:

E/E_P = f·t_P = m/m_P = T/T_P = l_P/λ = p/p_P = ... = X

Every physical quantity, expressed as a ratio to its Planck unit standard, gives the same dimensionless X. The different entries in the chain — energy, frequency, mass, temperature, wavelength, momentum — are not different physical quantities. They are the same geometric relationship expressed through different measurement axes, each axis carrying its own arbitrary unit scaling.

The Planck unit standards are not a special scale. They are the SI unit definitions restated in natural language — the combination of unit standards that, when divided into the SI quantity, cancels the arbitrary scaling exactly. Not approximately, not in some limit, but exactly by definition. That is what they are.

6.2 X Has No Seconds

X has no units. It has no seconds. It has nothing to do with Babylon.

X is the geometry of a physical configuration relative to the total geometric structure of the universe. The universe is the only non-arbitrary reference. Everything else — the second, the meter, the kilogram, the Planck units, the constants — is part of the measurement ritual. It is the map. X is what the map was always trying to describe.

The physical constants h, c, and G encode the Babylonian second. X does not. Change the second — choose a different astronomical convention, a different division of the day — and h, c, G all change their numerical values. X does not change. X is invariant to unit scaling by construction, because it is the ratio that remains after all unit scaling is removed.

This is the sense in which X is the real physical quantity and the constants are not. The constants are specific to a particular unit convention rooted in a particular astronomical history. X is not.

6.3 The Planck Jacobians

The transformation from SI units to X is a Jacobian — a precise accounting of the arbitrary scaling inserted at each axis of measurement, so it can be removed cleanly. The Planck unit standards are the Jacobian coefficients.

This transformation is not a change of scale. It is the removal of the fiction that the measurement axes were independent. Energy, frequency, mass, temperature, momentum, and wavelength were calibrated independently, by different experimental and historical traditions, using instruments ultimately anchored to the Babylonian second. The constants h, c, G, and k_B are the mismatch factors between these independently calibrated axes. They are not constants of nature. They are the correction factors required when you measure the same underlying geometry through multiple incompatible unit systems and then try to relate the results.

Apply the Planck Jacobians and the mismatch disappears. All axes collapse to X. The correction factors are no longer needed because the thing being corrected — the independent unit scaling — has been removed.


7. Why This Is Hard to See

The difficulty is not mathematical. The argument in this paper requires only algebra and dimensional analysis. The difficulty is historical and cognitive.

The second has been the universal time unit for longer than the concept of a unit system has existed. It was not chosen by any scientist. It was not questioned by any scientist. It was simply there, as water is simply there for a fish. The habit of measuring time in seconds was installed before there was any concept of a measurement convention to install. It does not feel like a choice because there was never a moment of choosing.

The framework then accepts the second as a primitive — an axiom. This is correct behavior inside the framework. Points are primitive in Euclidean geometry. Asking what a point really is inside Euclidean geometry is a malformed question. The framework cannot answer it because the framework bottoms out at points by construction. In the same way, asking what a second really is inside the SI framework is a malformed question. The training pipeline teaches this correctly: here are the units, here are the constants, here is how to use them. The question of what the units really are does not arise inside the training, and so it does not arise in practice.

The constants then inherit the axiomatic status of the units through a third layer: they are precise, they appear in the laws, they are measured to parts per billion, they were elevated to definitional status in 2019. They look like facts about nature. They look like the place where the chain of definition ends. They do not feel like Babylonian astronomy in mathematical disguise.

Three nested layers of invisibility. The second is invisible because it is ancient. The units are invisible because the framework treats them as primitives. The constants are invisible because they inherit their status from the units. To see through all three simultaneously requires stepping outside the framework entirely — which the framework, by construction, provides no mechanism to do.


8. Conclusion

The 2019 SI redefinition did not ground the unit system in nature. It grounded it in fixed numerical values of physical constants. Those constants are monomials in Planck unit standards. Those Planck unit standards are the SI unit definitions restated in natural language. Those SI unit definitions resolve, operationally and historically, to the second. The second is the Babylonian division of the astronomical day.

The chain is:

h, c, G → Planck unit standards → SI units (kg, m, s) → the second → Babylon

This is not a flaw. Every unit system must terminate in a convention. The flaw is in the claim — implicit in the framing of the 2019 redefinition, explicit in the standard pedagogy — that the constants are fundamental features of the territory rather than links in a chain of human convention.

The question "what is a kilogram really?" is not malformed. It is the question that traces this chain. The answer is: a kilogram is a particular human-chosen ratio of the Babylonian second, expressed through the Planck constant and the speed of light, which are themselves conversion factors between independently-calibrated measurement axes all anchored to the same ancient time convention.

The universe does not have kilograms. The universe does not have seconds. The universe does not have h, c, or G in the sense of intrinsic features of the territory. The universe has X — the dimensionless geometric ratio of each configuration to the whole. That ratio is invariant to every unit convention, every redefinition, and every choice of base-60 versus base-10 time division.

The Planck Jacobians are the ladder that takes you from the Babylonian second to X. Use the ladder. Then throw it away.

What remains is the geometry. It has nothing to do with Babylon.


The author notes that the argument presented here does not invalidate any experimental result, any prediction, or any calculation performed using SI units or physical constants. It concerns only the interpretation of what those constants are — not their operational utility. The map works. The map is not the territory.

The Constants Point to the Jacobians. The Jacobians Point to X.

 J. Rogers, SE Ohio

The Problem with Constants

Physics is full of constants — h, c, G, k_B, and others. They appear in every fundamental equation. They are measured to extraordinary precision. They are treated as deep facts about nature.

They are not.

h, c, and G are monomials built from the Planck unit standards:

h   = m_P l_P² / t_P
c   = l_P / t_P
G   = l_P³ / (t_P² m_P)

Every constant in physics is a ratio of Planck unit standards — m_P, l_P, t_P — combined in different proportions. They are not encoding gravitational physics, quantum physics, or thermodynamic physics. They are encoding the mismatches between the independently and arbitrarily defined SI unit axes: the kilogram, the meter, the second.

The constants are not kabbalist symbols that compel the universe to obey physical laws. They are conversion factors between unit axes that humans defined independently, without reference to each other, and then needed correction factors to relate.


The Three Steps of Every Physical Law

Every physical law performs the same three steps, whether or not it is presented that way:

Step 1 — Remove the input unit scaling. Take the measured quantities in SI units and divide by the appropriate Planck unit standards. This removes the arbitrary human scaling from the inputs. The constants appearing in this step — G/c², h/c², and so on — are exactly the Planck Jacobians: the transformation coefficients that cancel SI scaling.

Step 2 — Compute the pure dimensionless ratio. With the arbitrary scaling removed, what remains is a dimensionless geometric ratio. This is X. This is the actual physics. It has no units, no scale, no dependence on what measuring system any civilization happens to use.

Step 3 — Decorate with output unit scaling. Multiply by the appropriate Planck unit standards to re-express the result in whatever units the reader wants — kg, meters, seconds, or anything else.

Steps 1 and 3 are pure bureaucracy. They contain no physics. The physics is entirely in Step 2.

The constants appear in Steps 1 and 3 only. They are the unit removal and unit restoration machinery. When physics textbooks present G, ħ, or c as fundamental constants of nature, they are presenting the bureaucracy as if it were the content.


The Equivalence Chain

Combine the two most fundamental equations in physics:

E = mc²
E = hf

Set them equal and rearrange:

m / f = h / c² = m_P t_P

The left side contains the measured quantities — mass in kg, frequency in Hz. The right side is m_P t_P: the product of the Planck mass and Planck time, which are simply the unit standards that cancel the arbitrary SI scaling on mass and frequency.

This equation is saying: mass divided by frequency equals unit scaling. The ratio m/f is not a physical law. It is one dimensionless number — X — multiplied by the arbitrary unit scaling m_P t_P.

Strip the unit scaling and you have:

m_nat / f_nat = 1

Mass and frequency are the same axis. They were never different physical quantities. They were the same geometric ratio expressed through two independently calibrated measurement systems, with h/c² as the correction factor needed to translate between them.

This is why h/c² was never given a name or a place in the standard table of constants. If it had been named — call it Hz_kg — it would have been immediately obvious that Hz_kg = m_P t_P is just a product of two unit standards. The story of deep physical content would have been impossible to maintain.


The Planck Jacobians

The Jacobian transformation from SI units to natural units is not a change of scale. It is the removal of the arbitrary human scaling that was inserted between the measurement and the actual geometric relationship.

The Planck Jacobians are the accounting of exactly what arbitrary scaling was inserted at each axis of measurement — energy, frequency, mass, temperature, momentum, wavelength — so it can be removed cleanly and completely.

Consider the weak field of gravity:

τ = m_si / r_si         (meaningless — two arbitrary scalings)
τ = (l_P / m_P) · (m_si / r_si)    (the Jacobian removes the mismatch)

And G/c² = l_P / m_P. That is all G/c² is. It is the ratio of the Planck length to the Planck mass — the conversion factor between the length axis and the mass axis that corrects for the fact that meters and kilograms were defined independently. It is not gravitational physics. The gravitational physics is:

τ = m_nat / r_nat

A pure dimensionless ratio. Part to whole. That is the physics. G/c² is the Jacobian that gets you there from the SI inputs.

If you think G/c² is the physics instead of m_nat/r_nat, you cannot understand what physics is doing.


The Equivalence Chain and the Fifteen Laws

Remove the unit scaling from every physical quantity and express each as a dimensionless ratio against the Planck unit standards. The result is the equivalence chain:

E/E_P = f·t_P = m/m_P = T/T_P = l_P/λ = p/p_P = ... = X

Every entry in this chain is the same X — the same pure dimensionless number, expressed along a different measurement axis. Take any pair from the chain and set them equal, and you recover a known physical law:

  • E/E_P = m/m_P → E = mc²
  • E/E_P = f·t_P → E = hf
  • m/m_P = f·t_P → the mass-frequency relation
  • And so on — fifteen pairs, fifteen laws.

These are not fifteen independent discoveries. They are fifteen pairwise readings of a single equivalence chain. The laws are not independent. They are one statement, approached from different unit axes.

The equivalence chain works cleanly with Planck's original 1899 units. The later "reduced" Planck units — built around ħ = h/2π — break the wavelength entry. The wavelength pair becomes inconsistent with the others by a factor of 2π, requiring an arbitrary correction. This is because ħ absorbs a 2π into the unit standard itself, a 2π that has no home in the unit scaling — it belongs to the geometry of the cycle, not to the constant. h is the clean quantity. ħ is h with an unexplained pure number attached.

The 2π correction factor is a symptom. It is what you get when you put a geometric factor inside unit bureaucracy where it does not belong.


What X Is

X is not a unit chart. It is not a dimensionless number produced by the unit removal. The unit removal does not produce X — it stops obscuring X.

X is the geometry of a physical state against the entire universe.

When you remove all the arbitrary unit scaling from a measurement, what you are left with is the relationship of the thing being measured to the total geometric structure of everything. The universe is the only non-arbitrary reference. Every other reference — the kilogram, the meter, the second — is a rock or a stick that someone picked up and declared to be the standard.

m_nat / r_nat is not a calculation that the universe performs. It is the geometry of the space. The orbit is not the result of the universe computing an inverse square law. The planet moves in a straight line through curved space. The curvature is m_nat / r_nat. That is not a law the universe obeys — it is the shape of the space the planet moves through.

This is Mach's principle, generalized completely. Mach said inertia is not intrinsic — it is the relationship of a body to the mass distribution of the entire universe. But he stopped at inertia. Every property is like that. Mass, energy, frequency, temperature, momentum — none are intrinsic to the thing. They are all geometric relationships between a local state and the whole universe.

X is always: this configuration / the total configuration. Part to whole. The universe in the denominator, where it always belonged.


Wittgenstein's Ladder

Wittgenstein wrote: "My propositions serve as elucidations in the following way: anyone who understands me eventually recognizes them as nonsensical, when he has used them — as steps — to climb up on them. He must, so to speak, overcome these propositions; then he sees the world rightly. He must transcend these propositions. Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."

The Planck Jacobians are Wittgenstein's ladder.

Use them to climb from the arbitrary SI scaling to X. The climb is real and necessary. The accounting of what arbitrary scaling was inserted at each axis of measurement — the Jacobians — must be done carefully, completely, and correctly. The equivalence chain must be verified pair by pair. The constants must be identified as unit monomials. The correction factor for wavelength must be recognized as a symptom of ħ rather than accepted as a known quirk.

The climb is the work.

And then, when you have arrived at X — pure dimensionless geometry, no scale, no units, part to whole — you throw the ladder away.

The Jacobians are not part of the physics. They were the scaffold. The mechanism for removing the arbitrary human choices that were sitting between the measurement and the actual geometric relationship. Once those choices are removed, the Jacobians have done their job.

They are not in the territory. They were always only in the map.

The territory is the universe, moving in straight lines through curved space, locally, with no constants, no units, no measurement, no map.


Summary

What it looks like What it is
A fundamental constant of nature A monomial in Planck unit standards
G/c² encoding gravitational physics l_P/m_P — the length-to-mass unit conversion
h encoding quantum action m_P l_P² / t_P — the action unit standard
Fifteen independent physical laws Fifteen pairwise readings of one equivalence chain
The Planck scale as a special high-energy regime The inevitable result of removing all arbitrary unit scaling
Setting constants to 1 as a mathematical trick Revealing that all measurement axes are dependent
The Planck Jacobian as a change of scale The removal of arbitrary SI scaling — exactly, by definition
X as one entry in the equivalence chain The geometry of a physical state against the entire universe

The constants point to the Jacobians. The Jacobians point to X. X has no scale. X is not a product of the measurement ritual — it is what the measurement ritual was always trying to describe, obscured by unit bureaucracy that was mistaken for physics.

Climb the ladder. Then throw it away.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Mach's Principle Is Not About Inertia. It's About Everything.

J. Rogers, SE Ohio

When you remove every human unit standard from measurement, every physical quantity reduces to the same ratio against the universe. That ratio is what Mach was pointing at — and he didn't realize it was universal.


Physics has long known a set of equivalences. Each major field owns one link in a chain:

E/E_P = f·t_P = m/m_P = λ_P/λ = p/p_P = T/T_P = X

Relativists knew E ~ m. Quantum theorists knew E ~ f. Thermodynamicists knew E ~ T. Wave mechanicists knew f ~ 1/λ. Each community published their link and stayed inside their silo. Nobody applied transitivity across all of them simultaneously.

When you do apply transitivity — when you express every quantity in non-reduced Planck units and let the unit standards cancel — every quantity in the chain collapses to the same dimensionless ratio X. Not similar ratios. Not related ratios. The identical ratio.


What X actually is

The Planck Jacobian is the mathematical operation that performs this collapse. It cancels the human unit standards against the Planck unit chart — and crucially, both cancel completely. The human units disappear. But so do the Planck units.  Becue the Planck units are SI unit scaling inverted.  Neither survives the operation.

What remains is not a ratio against the Planck scale. The Planck scale is the solvent, not the residue — it cancels with the human unit standards and leaves nothing behind. No kilograms, no meters, no seconds, no Planck units. Just X: a pure, unitless ratio whose only reference is the entire universe itself.

The Planck Jacobian and the human unit standards annihilate each other. What survives is the raw relationship each quantity has to the whole — the universe as the sole remaining standard, carrying no units of any kind.


Mach saw it for inertia. It's true for everything.

Ernst Mach argued that inertia is not an intrinsic property of matter. It is a relationship — specifically, a relationship between a body and the rest of the universe. Mass doesn't resist acceleration because of something it contains. It resists acceleration because of its relational situation within the whole.

Mach was right. But he didn't realize he had found a universal principle, not a special one. Because when the Planck Jacobian cancels every unit standard simultaneously, every quantity — energy, frequency, temperature, momentum, length, mass — becomes the identical unitless ratio X against the same sole reference: the entire universe.

Mach's principle is not a special fact about inertia. It is a universal fact about measurement itself. Every measurable quantity is a relationship to the universe. Strip away every unit standard — human and Planck alike — and the only thing left is that relationship. Every axis collapses to the same X.


What this means for the constants

If every quantity is the same ratio X, then the equations connecting them — E=hf, E=mc², E=k_BT — are not deep discoveries about nature. They are tautologies. X = X, stated fifteen different ways for the fifteen pairwise combinations of six quantities.

The constants h, c, k_B, G are not profound facts about the universe. They are the conversion factors between the human unit systems that each silo developed independently — the fingerprints of our measurement conventions, not properties of nature. Einstein said as much about c²: mass and energy are the same thing measured two ways, and c² is unit scaling between them. The same is true of every constant in the chain.

Since 2019, the SI system has fixed h, c, e, and k_B by definition. If you change h, you have not discovered something new about nature. You have redefined the kilogram. The international metrology community enacted this conclusion without drawing its philosophical implications. The constants are conventions. Hume's guillotine applies: no amount of physics can prove that a mile has 5280 feet, and no amount of physics can give the constants values that are anything other than artifacts of our unit choices.


The natural ratios are what the universe looks like without us in the way

Strip away the kilogram, the meter, the second, the kelvin — every measurement standard humanity invented to navigate the world at human scales — and what remains is pure relation. The Planck Jacobian is the operation that performs this stripping. It cancels the human standards, cancels itself, and leaves only the universe relating to itself, with no intermediary.

This is what Mach was reaching for when he said inertia was relational. It is what Einstein was reaching for in his last thirty years when he searched for a unit-free description of the universe. None of them applied transitivity across every silo simultaneously. That step — seeing that every axis of measurement reduces to the identical X, that Mach's relational principle is universal and not special, that the Planck Jacobian cancels everything including itself leaving only the universe — is what the journal structure made impossible to publish and what self-publishing in March 2026 has now put on record.

The natural ratios are not a mathematical curiosity. They are what the universe looks like when you stop measuring it against a standard you invented and use the universe itself as your yardstick.

The First Book Is Live!!!

It is called "The Elephant In the Room" and it covers why we misunderstood constants for over 100 years.

I did a big push over the past few months and released the first of 3 books on this framework that this blog has been discussing for years now. 

The identifying number for the hardcover is ISBN-13979-8253948286.

The book is for sale here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GVC7FRTV

There are three price points for the ebook, the paperback and the hardcover.  I am charging a fair price point for each version. 

This book covers one specific thing, how losing natural philosophy resulted in no foundational progress in physics for decades.  This was no one person's fault: it was how we set up the reward, grant and publishing structures that lead to this result.

Physics has a hundred-year-old mystery: why do the fundamental constants — c, h, G, k₂ — have the specific numerical values they have? The question has driven entire research programs. It has generated a literature of extraordinary sophistication. It has not been answered, because it cannot be answered inside the existing framework. It is the wrong kind of question.

The constants are not properties of the universe. They are properties of how we measure it. The value of G encodes the history of the French Revolutionary committee that defined the meter. The value of h encodes the definitions of the joule and the second. Change those definitions — as the 2019 SI committee did, by vote — and the numbers change. The physics does not change. Because the physics was never in the numbers.

This book identifies why that question felt profound, proves that it was malformed, and shows what the correctly formed questions look like.

The second book will cover what physics looks like with geometric ratios.  The third book will cover how we build conceptual axis, scale them, combine them into vector spaces to construct knowledge across all fields of science. How we construct knowledge has implications for achieving AGI. 







 

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Measurement as Ratio: The Invariant Beyond Units and Constants

J. Rogers, SE Ohio

This paper is at: https://github.com/BuckRogers1965/Physics-Unit-Coordinate-System/tree/main/docs

Abstract

Measurement is the comparison of an object to a standard, yielding a dimensionless ratio. The subsequent attachment of a unit label is a human convention, not a discovery of an intrinsic property. The so‑called fundamental constants of physics—c,h,G,kB—appear only because we have already fixed our unit system. When we divide a measured quantity by its corresponding Planck value (a combination of these constants expressed in the same units), both the arbitrary human unit and the Planck “scale” cancel completely, leaving a pure dimensionless number X that depends on nothing but the object and the unified substrate. This number is the only physically meaningful invariant. The equality of X across all conceptual axes (mass, length, time, temperature, etc.) is the algebraic expression of the universe’s unity. In this view, constants are not part of the invariant; they are merely the scaffolding we use to strip away our own conventions, and they vanish entirely when we do so.


1. What Measurement Is

Consider a balance. On one pan sits a standard mass stamped “1 kg”. On the other pan sits an apple. A rider is moved along a graduated bar until equilibrium; the rider’s position reads “0.2”. What has been discovered?

The physical fact is the equilibrium condition. That condition yields a dimensionless number: the ratio of the apple’s mass to the standard mass. Because the bar is linear, the reading means

mapplemstandard=0.2.

The apple does not possess the label “kg”. The label belongs to the standard. The act of measurement compares the apple to that standard, and the result is a pure number—a ratio.

This is not philosophy; it is the operational definition of measurement. Every measurement—a ruler, a clock, a thermometer—follows the same pattern: compare to a standard, obtain a dimensionless ratio, then by convention attach the standard’s unit to the object, multiplying the ratio by that unit. The unit label is transferred, not discovered.

2. The Arbitrariness of the Standard

The standard itself is arbitrary. The kilogram was once a platinum‑iridium cylinder; today it is defined by fixing Planck’s constant. Regardless, the choice of unit is a human convention. Any other choice (gram, pound, solar mass) would serve equally well; the numerical ratio mapple/mstandard would change accordingly, but the physical relation between apple and standard remains invariant.

When we write mapple=0.2kg, we perform a conventional act: we take the pure ratio 0.2 and attach the unit “kg” that belongs to the standard. We then speak as if the apple has a property “0.2 kg”. This reification obscures the relational nature of measurement.

3. The Unified Substrate and the Invariant X

The universe does not come pre‑divided into “mass”, “length”, “time”, etc. Those are conceptual axes we impose. Beneath them lies a single, coherent substrate of interacting phenomena. Every object participates in that substrate, and every interaction involves all aspects of reality simultaneously.

If the substrate is truly unified, then for any object there exists a single dimensionless number—call it X—that captures its relation to the whole. This number does not depend on any unit, any constant, or any axis. It is the raw, unit‑free coordinate of the object in the substrate. All measurements, regardless of which axis we use, are attempts to determine X.

4. Constants as Scaffolding: Canceling the Standard

The constants c,h,G,kB are not fundamental parameters that appear in X. Instead, they are conversion factors that we have defined within our unit system. Their numerical values are determined by that system. They serve as a bridge: given a measurement in kilograms, we can use the constants to completely eliminate the arbitrary standard.

Take the apple’s mass measured in kilograms: m=0.2kg. The Planck mass is a combination of the constants:

mP=hcG.

But note: hc, and G are themselves expressed in the same unit system (SI). Thus mP is simply a fixed number of kilograms: mP5.456×108kg.

Now form the ratio:

mmP=0.2kgmPkg.

The kilograms cancel. What remains is a pure number—the quotient of two numbers expressed in the same arbitrary unit. That number does not depend on the kilogram. It does not even depend on the constants, because the constants were used only to compute mP in kilograms, and that computation is exactly what cancels the unit.

The result is simply a number. It has no memory of the standard, no memory of the Planck mass, no memory of the constants. It is the invariant X.

We can write this directly as:

X=mmP(a pure number).

Because both numerator and denominator share the same unit, the unit vanishes. The constants that went into defining mP vanish as well—they were only a ladder, and once we climb it, we leave it behind.

5. The Same X Across All Axes

Because the substrate is unified, the same invariant X must be obtained regardless of which axis we use to measure the object. For length:

X=llP,

where lP=Gh/c3 (again expressed in meters). For frequency:

X=ffP,

with fP=c5/(Gh) (expressed in hertz). For temperature:

X=TTP,

with TP=c5h/(GkB2) (expressed in kelvin).

In each case, the Planck value is a fixed number in the corresponding human unit. Dividing by it cancels that unit, yielding the same dimensionless X. The equalities among these ratios are not accidental; they are the algebraic shadow of the substrate’s unity. They also explain why the constants take the values they do relative to our unit system: they are precisely the conversion factors that make all these normalized ratios equal to the same X.

6. Why the Constants Are Not Fundamental

A common misconception is that the constants are “fundamental parameters” that set the scale of nature. The present analysis shows the opposite: the constants are derived from the combination of our arbitrary unit system and the invariant X. If we chose different units, the numerical values of c,h,G,kB would change, but X would remain the same. In fact, if we choose units where the constants become 1 (cancelling the unit stanards with Planck jacobians), then X is simply the measured quantity itself—no constants remain. This reveals that the constants were never intrinsic; they were merely the conversion factors needed to express the invariant X in terms of our chosen human units.

The reduced Planck constant =h/(2π) does not appear in this story because the factor 2π is irrelevant to unit scaling. It is a mathematical convenience that just creates cleaner notation in formulas, not to the structure of measurement.

7. Implications

  • Measurement reveals ratios, not properties. What we call “mass”, “length”, “time” are labels we attach to ratios.
  • The only invariant is the dimensionless number X. It depends on the object and the substrate, not on any human convention.
  • Constants are scaffolding. Their numerical values are artifacts of our unit system; they disappear entirely when we form the invariant X.
  • Natural units are simply the choice to measure in units where the scaffolding becomes 1, making the invariants directly visible.
  • Physical laws (e.g., E=mc2E=hf) are not independent; they are all expressions of the single relation X=X, projected onto different axes.

8. Conclusion

We began with a simple balance, an apple, and a standard. We saw that measurement yields only a dimensionless ratio, and that attaching a unit to the object is a convention. We then used the constants not as fundamental properties of nature, but as scaffolding that allows us to cancel our arbitrary units and reveal the true invariant X—a pure number that relates the object directly to the unified substrate. The same X emerges from measurements of length, frequency, temperature, and every other axis, because the substrate is one.

The constants are the ladder; X is the destination. When we finally look at the world without the ladder, we see only dimensionless numbers—and the unity that makes them equal across all axes.


Appendix A: Local Equivalences Without Global Transitivity

This appendix documents how standard physics already equates the major “silo” quantities pairwise—space with time, energy with mass, energy with frequency, energy with temperature, mass with inverse length, and so on—yet typically stops short of enforcing global transitivity across all silos. The result is a patchwork of local identifications that, if taken seriously and closed under transitivity, collapse into the single invariant X described in the main text.


A.1 Local identifications inside each silo

  1. Relativity: space  time  spacetime

    • Special relativity introduces Minkowski spacetime, where space and time are components of a single four‑vector.
    • In units where c=1, spatial distance and time interval share the same unit: a meter and the time it takes light to travel a meter are numerically identical.
    • Operationally, “one second” is defined by light travel over a fixed distance; conceptually, time and length are already unified in that frame.
  2. Relativistic energy: energy  mass

    • The relation E=mc2 makes energy and mass proportional.
    • In units where c=1, mass and energy carry the same dimension; a particle can be labeled interchangeably by its “mass” or its “rest energy.”
  3. Quantum mechanics: energy  frequency, time  energy

    • The Planck relation E=hf identifies energy with frequency; choosing units with h=1 makes them numerically identical.
    • The energy–time uncertainty relation ties energy scales to time scales, reinforcing the link between temporal structure and energetic structure.
  4. Statistical mechanics: energy  temperature

    • The relation EkBT identifies characteristic energies with temperatures.
    • In units where kB=1, “temperature” is literally just energy per degree of freedom; the numerical distinction disappears.
  5. Quantum field theory: mass  inverse length  inverse time

    • A particle’s Compton wavelength satisfies λC1/m (with =c=1), so mass and inverse length are interchangeable.
    • Frequencies and time scales also enter via dispersion relations; in natural units, mass, energy, inverse length, and inverse time all share the same dimension.

Within each theoretical silo, then:

  • Relativity collapses space and time.
  • Relativity plus mass–energy equivalence collapses mass and energy.
  • Quantum theory collapses energy and frequency, and ties energy to time scales.
  • Statistical mechanics collapses energy and temperature.
  • Quantum field theory collapses mass, inverse length, inverse time, and energy.

Each community implicitly says, “in the right units, these two are the same thing,” but usually only within its own conceptual neighborhood.


A.2 The transitivity that is not enforced

Taken together, these equivalences form a connected graph:

  • Nodes: {space,time,mass,energy,frequency,temperature,inverse length,}.
  • Edges: proportionalities such as chkB, and  that become 1 in suitable units.

By ordinary reasoning:

  • If space  time (via c), and time  energy scales (via uncertainty relations), and energy  mass (via E=mc2), and mass  inverse length (via Compton wavelength), then space is connected to inverse length and mass and temperature and frequency through a chain of identifications.
  • Once all the conversion factors are set to 1 (Planck or natural units), every edge becomes an equality of numerical variables.

However, in practice:

  • Each field uses the equivalence it needs and then stops.
  • Relativists talk about spacetime, but do not typically say “length is just inverse temperature” in the same breath, even though the chain of known equivalences leads there.
  • Stat mech texts treat kBT as an “energy scale” but rarely connect that directly to, say, an inverse length scale via the full transitive closure of all constants.
  • QFT works happily with mass  inverse length  inverse time, but still labels these as different “kinds” of quantity.

The result is a locally unified, globally segregated picture: each silo is internally consistent and uses some subset of equivalences, yet the discipline as a whole does not promote the full connected graph to a single equivalence class under transitivity.


A.3 From local equivalences to a single invariant X

The main text of the paper takes the next step:

  1. Start with the network of identifications already accepted in each silo.
  2. Strip away human units by normalizing to Planck (or equivalent natural) scales.
  3. Take transitivity seriously across the entire network.

Under this view:

  • Once c=h=G=kB=1, all the proportionality constants become identity maps.
  • Every “axis”—mass, length, time, temperature, frequency, etc.—is just a different coordinate chart on a single substrate.
  • For a given object, the normalized quantities m/mPl/lPt/tPT/TPf/fP, and so on are not merely dimensionless; they are equal to the same invariant number X, because they are all descriptions of the same underlying relation to the unified substrate.

In other words, the discipline has already built the ladder:

  • It has identified all the rungs pairwise (inside each silo) and even adopted unit systems where the constants become 1.
  • What it has not done is declare the ladder collapsed: enforce global transitivity and announce that there is only one invariant coordinate left after all equivalences and normalizations are applied.

A.4 Why the global closure is typically avoided

This appendix does not claim that global transitivity is logically impossible within current physics; rather, it notes that it is not standard practice to enforce it. Reasons include:

  • Conceptual convenience: Keeping “mass,” “length,” and “temperature” as distinct labels is pedagogically and practically useful, even if they become numerically equivalent in certain units.
  • Multiple dimensionless parameters: The Standard Model and cosmology appear to involve many independent dimensionless couplings and ratios; this encourages a view with many invariants instead of a single X.
  • Disciplinary silos: Each subfield optimizes its own language and rarely insists on a fully unified ontology across all others.

The paper’s proposal is precisely to close the loop: to recognize that the community has already accepted enough pairwise identifications that, when taken together and normalized by Planck jacobians that cancel the unit standards, they naturally define a single dimensionless invariant X that survives the collapse of all silos.


References

  1. Annenberg Learner – “Learning Math: Measurement – Part B: The Role of Ratio (Fundamentals of Measurement)”learner This resource explicitly frames measurement as comparing an unknown to a standard and emphasizes that the result is a ratio, not an intrinsic property, which underpins your Section 1 claim that measurement yields a dimensionless number before any unit label is attached.

  2. “Measurement in Science,” Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP). plato.stanford The SEP article provides a rigorous philosophical and operational account of measurement as the assignment of numbers via comparison procedures and standardized instruments, supporting your treatment of units and standards as conventions layered on top of a more primitive comparison process.

  3. “Measurement,” Wikipedia. en.wikipedia This overview describes measurement as the process of associating numbers with physical quantities according to rules and standards, reinforcing your argument that the act itself is a structured comparison to a conventional unit rather than the discovery of a built‑in label like “kg” in the object.

  4. “Dimensionless Physical Constant,” Wikipedia. en.wikipedia This entry defines dimensionless constants as pure numbers whose values are independent of any unit system, which dovetails with your invariant X as a unit‑free quantity and supports your claim that only such dimensionless combinations are truly universal.

  5. J.‑P. Uzan, “Dimensionless constants and cosmological measurements,” arXiv:1304.0577. arxiv Uzan argues that only dimensionless combinations of constants are operationally meaningful in cosmology and fundamental physics, directly resonating with your thesis that c,h,G,kB are scaffolding for constructing invariant, dimensionless ratios rather than themselves being part of the invariant.

  6. “Planck Units,” Wikipedia. en.wikipedia This article defines Planck units by setting c,,G,kB to 1 and shows how quantities like the Planck mass, length, and temperature arise from these constants, supporting your construction of mP,lP,TP as unit‑dependent scales used only to cancel human units and expose the pure number m/mPl/lP, etc.

  7. “Planck units,” TCS Wiki. tcs.nju.edu The TCS Wiki summary highlights that Planck units arise from combining constants associated with relativity, quantum theory, gravitation, and thermodynamics, which aligns with your view that these constants are conversion bridges between conceptual axes rather than independent “fundamental properties” appearing in X.

  8. “UNIT 1: Philosophy of Measurement – Calibration,” engineering metrology notes. scribd These metrology notes stress that a measurement result is a number representing the ratio of the quantity to a chosen unit, and they discuss standards and calibration as conventional but necessary structures, lending technical support to your Sections 2 and 4, where the kilogram and other standards are treated as arbitrary scaffolding used to reveal the underlying dimensionless invariant.

You Are Living in the Matrix. It Is Called the SI Unit System.

 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...