What if nothing happened-and everything changed?When an interstellar object known as 3I/ATLAS passes close to Earth, scientists expect nothing more than data. And for seven minutes, that expectation seems correct. No collision. No measurable anomaly. No signal that should matter.And yet, in the days that follow, something spreads.Millions of people across the world begin reporting a shared, deeply personal experience-an undefined "shift" in perception, meaning, or consciousness. There is no common doctrine. No clear belief system. No single narrative. Only a growing conviction that something happened, even if no one can say exactly what.What begins as uncertainty evolves into belief. Belief fragments into competing explanations. Fragmentation gives way to panic. Panic becomes contagious. And soon, the crisis is no longer about a comet at all-but about truth itself.The Meme Plague is a work of philosophical science fiction about how reality fractures in an age of algorithmic amplification, information overload, and epistemic instability. Through the eyes of Dr. Rachel Moore-a cognitive scientist drawn into the aftermath of the event-the novel traces the transformation of a non-event into a global psychological and cultural phenomenon.This is not a story about aliens, hidden messages, or secret technologies. There is no revelation waiting at the end. Instead, the book explores how meaning forms in the absence of facts, how belief spreads without persuasion, and how systems designed to optimize attention quietly reshape human consciousness.As social media algorithms begin amplifying ambiguity itself-rewarding uncertainty, emotional resonance, and participation over clarity-ideas start evolving faster than truth can keep up. Narratives replicate not because they are accurate, but because they are fit. Eventually, even meaning becomes optional. Behavior spreads without belief. Panic spreads without narrative. And shared reality begins to collapse.At the heart of the novel is a disturbing question: What happens when people can no longer agree on how to know what is true?As scientists, policymakers, and institutions struggle to respond, they discover that the problem cannot be solved with better fact-checking or stronger debunking. The crisis is not misinformation-it is epistemic collapse: the breakdown of the shared frameworks that once allowed societies to distinguish knowledge from belief.Written in a restrained, reflective style, The Meme Plague blends hard science fiction, philosophy of science, systems theory, and psychological realism. It draws inspiration from real research into information contagion, network effects, cognitive bias, and the attention economy, while remaining grounded in human relationships-between colleagues, families, and communities divided not by ideology, but by incompatible ways of knowing.This is a novel for readers who are less interested in answers than in questions. For those who recognize that certainty can be as dangerous as ignorance. For those living in a world where truth feels fragile, contested, and perpetually provisional.The Meme Plague does not offer comfort. It offers clarity of a different kind: an honest examination of what it means to think, to doubt, and to remain human in an environment where meaning spreads faster than understanding.Because when everything seems possible, knowing becomes the hardest task of all.