The Slavery of Technological Statistics
Technology and software statistics taught me one thing: It is enough for just one person to like, approve, or resonate with what you have done, written, or thought. Because to understand what is real, you do not need millions of people — you need only a single spark of consciousness.
Today, people no longer wait for the truth of their own ideas — they wait for the approval of data. A post that receives millions of likes is considered “true”; a thought seen by few is deemed “insignificant.” Yet millions of likes are merely the outcome of a virtual algorithm; but a single like is a human being recognizing the truth. One is software; the other, the echo of consciousness.
The Illusion of Statistics in Virtual Reality
Consider this example: Thousands of fake accounts send “likes” to a video all at once. The platform shows it as popular. But not a single person has actually watched that video with real understanding. So what is the value of popularity in this case? Does the number of likes reveal the truth, or does the impression left by a thought?
Real statistics are what people talk about among themselves — when one person asks another, “Have you heard about this?”
When a human being transmits an idea with their brain, heart, and experience, it becomes living data. Digital likes, on the other hand, are merely a “data simulation.”
Statistics Do Not Show the Truth — They Direct It
Social media and technology giants use statistics as tools of direction. Their purpose is not to measure the truth, but to determine who should see what, who should hear what, and who should believe what. That is why what is “widely viewed” is not necessarily true — it is merely what they want to be shown.
As people fall under the spell of numbers, they lose their ability to think. Yet thinking relies not on statistics, but on intuition.
To accept something simply because “the majority says so” is to surrender your mind to someone else’s algorithm.
Real Statistics: Truth That Has Concluded
Statistics are not a conclusion — they are a direction Real statistics are the conclusion of an event that has truly been lived and resolved. If a mind has understood that event, if a human being has internalized it — then a conclusion has been born.
Because what measures the truth is not data, but awareness.
Do not listen to people on screens — listen to them as they speak to one another. What you will hear there will not be numbers — it will be truth itself.