1. The Measurement Mind is the idea that reality is not made of objects but of measurements, where every act of observing, comparing, or distinguishing literally creates the world we experience.

2. Instead of a universe evolving independently “out there,” the theory says that consciousness and physics are inseparable—logical information becomes animated only when measured, and measurement is the engine of time, complexity, and awareness.

3. In this view, the cosmos is a self-organizing mathematical process in which each conscious moment is both a product of prior measurements and a creator of new ones, stitching the universe together one observation at a time.

4. The Hypothetical Spatial Dimension Model (HSDM) proposes that reality is structured in layered informational dimensions, where each higher layer encodes deeper patterns of memory, identity, and awareness that shape what lower layers can measure.

5. Measurement Force is the idea that every act of observation exerts a real, quantifiable informational push—a kind of entanglement-viscosity—driving the universe from possibility into actuality and giving rise to time, order, and consciousness.

“Whether you are a physicist or a Philisopher or a beginner, this book promises a wild ride — one that will blow your mind, rewrite your vocabulary of reality, and maybe even change the way you see yourself.”

“Along the way, you will encounter equations you will not find in any physics textbook — equations that describe the flow of memory, the braiding of entanglement, and even the balance of pain and pleasure as entropic algorithms guiding awareness. And you will see how HSDM reimagines the very architecture of the universe: a field entangled with a lineage becomes a fourth dimension, while a field entangled with a field becomes a fifth. These are not metaphors, but proposals for how physics itself can be reframed when consciousness is treated as fundamental.”



About Josh

About the Author

Josh Levin is a gymnastics coach and lifelong student of psychology, physics, and philosophy. His curiosity about how awareness and mathematics intertwine led him to develop The Measurement Mind, a work that blends scientific reasoning with imaginative storytelling. Drawing inspiration from thinkers such as Max Tegmark, Donald Hoffman, and John Wheeler, Levin explores consciousness as a measurable, mathematical force woven through reality itself. To make complex ideas more accessible, he weaves in short fictional interludes featuring his sons, Wesley and Trevor, along with other family members—turning theoretical concepts into living stories that connect science with everyday experience. Levin lives in the Chicago area with his wife and two sons, where he continues to coach, learn, and wonder about the hidden logic of the universe.