What if the world you experience is not fixed, but stabilized?
Not imagined.
Not unreal.
But maintained through observation, identity, alignment, and perception.
The World That Does Not Exist is a calm philosophical inquiry into reality as experienced from within. It does not ask the reader to accept a belief system, reject the physical world, or adopt a new doctrine. Instead, it invites the reader to examine something far more immediate: the structure of experience itself.
- Why does reality feel continuous?
- Why does identity change depending on where we are and who we are with?
- Why do dreams feel real while we are inside them?
- Why do familiar places, memories, roles, and relationships stabilize our sense of self?
Through a precise and contemplative exploration, Sæmundur Björnsson presents a model of reality not as a fixed external container, but as stabilized experience - something occupied, reinforced, and observed from within.
This is not a book of certainty.
It is a book of observation.
Written for readers drawn to philosophy, consciousness, perception, identity, and the deeper questions beneath ordinary experience, The World That Does Not Exist offers a quiet but powerful invitation:
Read without belief.
Observe without assumption.
And see what remains.