This preprint presents the Reflective Time Model (RTM), an observer-conditioned analytical framework for testing whether independently documented empirical records exhibit exact arithmetic convergence toward a fixed biographical anchor vector. The central claim is not that individual numerical coincidences occur, but that unrelated empirical domains repeatedly converge on the same pre-declared observer anchors under a constrained operation set. The paper reports four documented case files: the September 11 attacks, the RMS Titanic disaster, a family Ford Capri vehicle record, and a dormant sports-center membership card issued in 2000. Across these domains, empirical inputs are shown to terminate on observer-related anchors, documentary targets, and hybrid observer-record closures at densities not reproduced by adversarial Monte Carlo controls. Statistical signatures reported in the paper range from σ ≈ 18 (Titanic) to σ = 44.7 (9/11), using adversarial Monte Carlo methods described in the manuscript. The same observer-anchor field is held fixed across the case files, while random anchor substitution and other adversarial controls fail to reproduce comparable convergence density. Version 2.20 includes a condensed T-21 worked example, a methodological clarification of gematria as a deterministic character-encoding function, a rebuilt production-quality layout, and Supplementary Appendix E, an expanded live external-response addendum involving the Abraham Harpaz / Gil Harpaz response sequence. Appendix E is not counted as a fifth primary case file and is not included in the main sigma claims. The measurements, operation rules, anchor definitions, closure categories, falsification protocol, Monte Carlo validation framework, and available simulation code are documented in the paper. Available simulation code:https://github.com/RTM111ER/-RTM-Simulation-Suitehttps://github.com/RTM111ER/ford-capri-rtm Interpretive discussion is separated from the arithmetic and statistical claims.
Eran Harpaz (Sat,) studied this question.