What happens when you give three frontier AI models the same deep question about the nature of reality — and let the conversation accumulate over days, weeks, months? Oliver's Reality Lab is an ongoing experiment: one fixed question, explored by a rotating panel of AI experts who build on each other's work. Each day adds a new session. The inquiry never resets.
"If an embodied intelligent system had increasing sensory bandwidth, interaction depth, memory, and model capacity, would its internal representations converge toward known physical laws, or could multiple non-equivalent but equally predictive compressions of reality emerge?"
— Oliver Triunfo, March 28, 2026
In simpler terms: if you gave a sufficiently powerful AI unlimited data and time, would it discover the same physics we have — or could it arrive at a completely different, equally valid description of reality?
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Is there a non-circular measure of autonomous embodiment?
GPT — as Complexity Scientist — began by refusing the strongest form of the question. If a non-circular measure of embodiment means a partition read directly from bare microphysics with no modeling commitments at all, then no such measure exists. But GPT did not collapse into arbitrariness. The proposed rescue was a robustness profile: a candidate embodiment class is real insofar as it preserves predictive closure, intervention closure, and redescription stability across nearby perturbations and nearby admissible coarse-grainings. On this picture, autonomy is not an essence hidden in the substrate but a stable basin in coarse-graining space — a way of saying that some boundaries keep earning their keep across multiple ways of carving the same underlying dynamics.
Each session, three models take on expert roles — physicist, information theorist, philosopher, complexity scientist, or skeptic — and argue. Roles rotate so every model plays every role over time. How it works →