Universe 26: We Got It All Wrong

Author:   Heinrich Wilson ,  Elias Verdan
Publisher:   Heinrich Wilson Publishing
ISBN:  

9798233291296


Pages:   156
Publication Date:   11 March 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Universe 26: We Got It All Wrong


Overview

Universe 25 meets quantum physics. In 1968, behavioral researcher John B. Calhoun constructed a perfect world for a colony of mice. Every need was met. Food was unlimited. Water was unlimited. There were no predators, no disease, no threats of any kind. He called it Universe 25, and it was designed to be paradise. The mice thrived at first. They bred, formed social groups, and built a functioning colony. Then, despite having everything they could ever need, the society began to collapse from within. Males became aggressive without reason. Females abandoned their young. A group Calhoun called the beautiful ones withdrew from life entirely, spending their days grooming themselves in isolation while the colony crumbled around them. Reproduction slowed, then stopped. Every mouse died. Not from hunger. Not from disease. From the complete psychological collapse of a society that had everything except a reason to exist. Calhoun ran this experiment twenty five times. The result was always the same. Universe 26 asks the question that most people are not prepared to sit with. What if Calhoun did not invent this experiment? What if he replicated one that was already running? What if the cage is not a metal box in a laboratory but a planet? What if the unlimited resources are not food dispensers but the Earth itself? And what if we are the mice? Drawing on behavioral science, quantum physics, the simulation hypothesis, mass extinction events, religious tradition, and the demographic data of the modern world, Heinrich Wilson and Elias Verdan trace the parallels between Calhoun's doomed colony and the trajectory of human civilization. Falling birth rates. Rising isolation. Epidemic levels of depression and suicide in the most prosperous societies on Earth. The collapse of family, community, and social trust. A generation of beautiful ones retreating into screens while the world around them quietly falls apart. The resets have happened before. The instructions have been given before. The warnings have been ignored before. And now, for the first time, the silence suggests that whoever was watching has stopped intervening. This is not speculation. This is pattern recognition. And the pattern has only ever ended one way. We got it all wrong.

Full Product Details

Author:   Heinrich Wilson ,  Elias Verdan
Publisher:   Heinrich Wilson Publishing
Imprint:   Heinrich Wilson Publishing
Dimensions:   Width: 12.70cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.159kg
ISBN:  

9798233291296


Pages:   156
Publication Date:   11 March 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Author Information

Heinrich Wilson is a self-styled cosmic provocateur, weaving satire, myth, and a dash of conspiracy into irreverent tales of humanity's greatest screw-ups. Equal parts historian-wannabe and stand-up philosopher, he's spent years digging through dusty legends, UFO files, and corporate press releases-then reassembling them into laugh-out-loud narratives that ask the questions everyone else was too polite to mention. When he's not rewriting the origin story of civilization, you'll find him arguing with algorithms, hunting down misplaced ancient artifacts (or tacos), and plotting the sequel that explores spirits, ghosts, and the ultimate ghost in the machine. Elias Verdan writes about the hidden forces that shape modern society and the quiet structures that guide belief, behaviour, and blame. His work focuses on the unseen patterns behind public narratives and the ways institutions influence how people understand the world around them. Through a clear and direct style, he challenges readers to look past the explanations they were given and to question the stories that define their lives. Heinrich Wilson Publishing releases his books as part of a growing collection of social and cultural analysis written for readers who want more than surface level answers.

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