Spacetime-Probability Mechanics
The branch of five-dimensional physics that describes how objects move through the combined manifold of space, time, and probability. Unlike classical mechanics, where an object's position is defined by three spatial coordinates and one temporal coordinate, spacetime-probability mechanics requires specifying which probability branch you're in at any given moment. This explains why your keys seem to "teleport" between locations—they're not moving in space; they're shifting in probability-space, and you're just not observing the correct branch. The mathematics involve "probability vectors," "branch trajectories," and a complex function called the "universal wavefunction of lost items," which has so far resisted all attempts at analytical solution.
*Example: "He applied spacetime-probability mechanics to his morning routine, calculating that his phone had a 73% probability of being in the bedroom, 20% in the kitchen, and 7% in a dimension where he'd already left for work and was currently panicking without it. He checked the bedroom, found it, and felt like a five-dimensional genius. Then he realized he'd been holding it the whole time, which the equations had not accounted for."*
Spacetime-Probability Mechanics by Abzugal February 14, 2026
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