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You believe cause comes before effect. That belief shapes how you see choice, blame, and responsibility. Physics quietly disagrees. At a fundamental level, the universe does not explain itself through causes. It does not tell stories. It does not care about before and after the way the human mind does. In this video, we explore why causality may not be a basic feature of reality at all, but a mental framework humans impose to survive and predict the world. Drawing from foundational physics and Richard Feynman’s way of thinking, we examine how modern equations describe relationships, not reasons. Physics does not ask why something happened. It asks what happens together, and what is allowed. We explore how time symmetric laws undermine the idea that causes must come first, why equations work just as well backward, and how events can occur without identifiable triggers when nothing forbids them. This is not a rejection of science. It is science taken seriously. By following the logic where physics actually leads, causality begins to look less like a law of nature and more like a cognitive shortcut. Useful. Predictive. But not fundamental. This video is not about comfort or motivation. It is about removing assumptions you did not know you were making. Topics covered include: • Why causality feels obvious but is never directly observed • How physics replaces causes with constraints and relations • Richard Feynman’s refusal to explain nature using intuition • Time symmetric laws and the illusion of before and after • Events that occur without causes but remain lawful • Why the brain invents causal stories • What reality looks like without narrative or sequence If causality is not fundamental, then much of what feels certain about life is a story we tell ourselves. And physics does not promise to preserve that story.