• Supersymmetry predicts that each of the particles in the Standard Model has a partner with a spin that differs by half of a unit. So fermions and vice versa accompanied bosons. Supersymmetry more than doubles the number of particles in the Standard Model.
  • However, after years of searching and loads of accumulated data from countless collisions, there is no sign of any supersymmetric particle.
  • Either SUSY doesn’t exist, or we can’t find it. Supersymmetry is now on life support. It probably will die soon,
  • Either SUSY doesn’t exist, or we can’t find it. Goodbye, little SUSY.
  • What can replace SUSY? Right now, nothing. String theory, M-theory, and extra dimensions are falling apart themselves. Beyond the standard model, right now offers little.
  • Artist's depiction of a nebula in space.
  • The quantum world is lumpy.
  • What gives rise to the reality that we perceive? Perception creates reality. Our perceptions profoundly affect how we experience life. We believe what we perceive to be accurate. We make our realities from our perceptions. We experience reality through our senses, which limits how we process reality. Your brain models the perception of the world that you are viewing. Your brain predicts how a scene should look, sound, and feel. It then generates a hallucination based on these predictions. 
  • Computing in the Human Brain | IEEE Computer Society
  • You never experience actual reality because you have no direct access to it. Your brain has an obsession with change. Our senses limit our perceptions. We can’t see what is on the backside of our perceptions. The only thing you will ever know comes from those electrical pulses that are sent up by your senses. You see only a part of the picture. There is a different picture going on beyond your insights, and the state of play is also different. There’s no color out there either. Atoms are colorless. Our eyes supply the colors of three cones in our eyes: red, green, and blue.
  • Color is a lie. It’s set-dressing, worked up by the brain. Color helps us interact with the external world and better control it. Our storytelling brain uses those pulses to create the colorful set in which to play out our lives.