From shifting light to altered perception, these moments quietly distort how the brain tracks passing time.

For much of modern science, randomness was assumed to be the default state of nature. Small fluctuations were treated as noise, and irregular behavior was expected in complex systems influenced by countless variables.
But as instruments improved and long-term data accumulated, researchers began noticing something unexpected. Repeating patterns kept appearing in places once thought chaotic.
These patterns don’t break physical laws, but they challenge older assumptions about how nature organizes itself. The evidence suggests order may be far more common than scientists once believed.








