This paper presents a critical and integrative analysis of the theoretical framework developed by cognitive scientist Donald D. Hoffman, centered on three interrelated propositions: the Interface Theory of Perception (ITP), the Fitness-Beats-Truth Theorem (FBT), and Conscious Agent Theory (CAT). Drawing on Hoffman’s published scientific work, mathematical derivations, and a recent in-depth public discourse with entrepreneur Steven Bartlett, we argue that the Darwinian framework, when rigorously formalized with tools from evolutionary game theory, entails that no sensory system has ever been shaped to perceive objective reality. Spacetime, far from being fundamental, emerges as a species-specific user interface—an evolutionary data structure for fitness payoff compression. We further examine how Conscious Agent Theory proposes that spacetime and its particles are projections of a deeper Markovian dynamics of conscious agents beyond spacetime. The implications are profound: technological horizons unimaginable within a physicalist paradigm become tractable; the hard problem of consciousness dissolves under a non-physicalist monism; and the moral and existential architecture of human life finds new grounding in the recognition that perceived neighbors are, in a mathematically precise sense, alternative expressions of the same underlying conscious reality. We conclude with reflections on artificial intelligence, the simulation hypothesis, and the convergence between contemplative tradition and frontier physics.
Zen Revista (Sat,) studied this question.