This study presents a multi-layered research framework that integrates experimental analyses of macroscopic randomness with cognitive, philosophical, and interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives. The core of the research is based on controlled experiments designed to examine the effect of observation and participation on statistical outcomes in classical random systems. Within this framework, coin tosses, dice rolls, roulette scenarios, and card-based experiments were tested under observed and unobserved conditions. Up to 10,000 trials per experiment were conducted, and the resulting datasets were analyzed using various statistical methods. The findings indicate that: Statistically significant deviations emerge under observed conditions (p < 0.001), Results under unobserved conditions remain closer to theoretical distributions, Active participation tends to amplify the observed deviation effect. The study is structured in a systematic academic format, including introduction, literature review, methodology, findings, statistical analyses, methodological limitations, reliability assessment, and raw data appendices. Beyond the experimental framework, the study also addresses broader theoretical domains: Simulation Hypothesis and observation-dependent models of reality, Interpretation of dreams as cognitive “internal simulations”, Temporal recall and decision threshold models, Interaction between consciousness and system-level processes, Concepts of death, continuity of perception, and memory reconstruction, Philosophical and theological approaches to system boundaries and exit concepts, A conceptual model referred to as the “Invisible Connection Theory,” aiming to explain patterns between events, decisions, and past interactions. The primary objective is to establish an interdisciplinary connection between experimentally observed statistical deviations and frameworks from cognitive science, neuroscience, philosophy, and information-based models of reality. The results should be interpreted with caution. Alternative explanations such as experimental bias, environmental factors, and statistical fluctuations must also be considered. While not claiming to provide definitive proof, the study aims to serve as a strong foundation for future interdisciplinary research.
YALÇIN ATABEY (Mon,) studied this question.