Collapse Theory

Bruce Tisler

Collapse Theory explores how knowledge isn't found—it's shaped. Each episode follows a catalytic question through the HDT² grammar: Ω (intent), Δ (entropy), Φ (resolution), and Ψ (recursion). Hosted by Bruce Tisler, this podcast dives into the cognitive physics of inquiry—where questions act like particles and collapse defines meaning. For thinkers, builders, and seekers ready to transform how we know. The voices used in this podcast is synthesized using AI text-to-speech technology. All rights to the original written content are retained by the author.

Episodes

  1. When Inquiry Becomes Structure: AI's Evolving Cognition

    JUL 8

    When Inquiry Becomes Structure: AI's Evolving Cognition

    Welcome to The Invention of Cognitive Particles That re-imagines what a question really is. In this episode we treat inquiry not as a gap in knowledge but as an energetic cognitive particle, something with measurable properties that unfolds and interacts much like a quantum event. Join us as we map this particle-based model of questioning to real-world problem-solving, AI design, and beyond. Explore references and bonus material at quantuminquiry.org. Transparency note: This podcast was generated using Googles Deep Dive. I provided the AI my research and gave it this specific set of instructions: "Please structure this Audio Overview as a guided inquiry using the following 4 steps from the HDT² method. Stay "strictly grounded" in the uploaded sources. Do not invent new claims or speculate beyond what is supported. Step 1 – Core Question   Begin by identifying the central question or problem the sources are trying to explore. Express it as something that "isn't fully resolved" a genuine inquiry or tension. Step 2 – Key Unknowns   List 3 to 5 confusing, debated, or still-open issues raised in the sources. These are the major uncertainties, contradictions, or puzzles the authors discuss. Step 3 – Meaning Shift   Select "one" of these unknowns and help the listener think about it in a new way, using analogy or re-framing. Do not add new claims only reinterpret what’s already present. Step 4 – Follow-Up Questions   Close by asking 1 or 2 deeper questions inspired by the material. These should help listeners explore the topic further, "without assuming anything that isn’t supported by the sources". Important Instructions: - Stay inside the source material. Do not invent, embellish, or assume unstated facts.   - If something is speculative or only implied, clearly say so: e.g., “The sources suggest…” or “It’s unclear, but one interpretation could be…” - Avoid narrative storytelling unless the sources already contain it. This is a structured exploration, not a dramatization. -The resource is a collection of articles published on Medium.com in order of publication. All research including drafting, and post production and final editorial judgment remains human, me.

    36 min

About

Collapse Theory explores how knowledge isn't found—it's shaped. Each episode follows a catalytic question through the HDT² grammar: Ω (intent), Δ (entropy), Φ (resolution), and Ψ (recursion). Hosted by Bruce Tisler, this podcast dives into the cognitive physics of inquiry—where questions act like particles and collapse defines meaning. For thinkers, builders, and seekers ready to transform how we know. The voices used in this podcast is synthesized using AI text-to-speech technology. All rights to the original written content are retained by the author.