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Theory of Causality of Light

A framework examining how causality operates through light—the role of photons in transmitting causal influence across space and time. Theory of Causality of Light asks: Is light the only carrier of causality? What happens at the cosmic scale where light takes billions of years to travel? How does causality work in regimes where light hasn't yet arrived? The theory explores the relationship between light speed and causal structure, asking whether causality might have other carriers.
Theory of Causality of Light "We see stars as they were, not as they are—causality delayed by light's travel. Causality of Light says that's not just astronomy; it's fundamental. Light carries causality across space. The question is: what happens in places light hasn't reached? Is causality absent, or just waiting?"
by Abzugal March 5, 2026
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The lights were too bright

When someone reaches for greatness with the intention of performing, but the moment becomes too big and they fold under the pressure. Used when someone can’t handle the spotlight once all the attention is on them.
“They called him the next superstar, but when the championship came, the lights were too bright.”
by RockyOnVenus March 9, 2026
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