VTM Podcast - Episode 10 - Life goes through a pipeline.
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
-
ナレーター:
-
著者:
概要
In episode ten of the Volumetric Time Model series, Ralph Clayton takes the next step beyond the distinction between the world and the record by introducing one of the central ideas in the framework: the observer as pipeline. This episode explores how reality does not arrive as raw, immediate truth, but through a chain of delivery — events become traces, traces become signals, signals become records, and records become belief. Along the way, Ralph shows how perception is always filtered, delayed, compressed, and interpreted, whether through light crossing cosmic distances, instruments extracting signals from noise, or the human mind reconstructing experience from incomplete inputs.
The episode also breaks down the major limits every pipeline faces — bandwidth, noise, and latency — and explains how these shape uncertainty, disagreement, and the felt experience of temporal flow. Ralph argues that what we call “the present” is often just the moving boundary of what our pipeline has managed to deliver, not a universal slice of reality. From there, he connects the idea to modern life, scientific measurement, human perception, and the difference between clean stories and robust access. The episode closes by opening the next major question in the series: why seeing clearly does not necessarily mean being able to steer outcomes, and how this sets up a more operational theory of influence