No, perceptions of reality reflect the observer. Actual objective reality doesn't give a pair of fetid dingo's kidneys what I think about it. My perceptions will shape the model of reality that I construct within my consciousness, but the reality of the universe is not altered by my opinions or desires regarding how it works
Incontrivertibly wrong.
Whether or not the universe has a consciousness ''to care'' about what we think, that it a question left for the philosophers who care of such matters.
Consciousness however does exist, and we do reflect the reality we observe through complex biochemical changes, from that one single photon absorbed by the retina. The world we see at large is indeed only a representational view of the reality at large, this has been a known fact of quantum physics and nuerosciences for a very long time. The world we project however has one of the most impossible connections to the metric of a space, and that is through time.
My studies, which have been considerably vast, has finally come to ask, ''Is time an emergent property of space?'' And from here, i conclused scientifically and logically that geometric time was only ever experienced by a conscious observer, the same geometric time we deal with in the geometry of Minkowskian Space. The quantization of time however, is something beyond the threshold of any consciousness. The major thing to remember here, is that the speed of consciousness (or thought-processes and electrical signal processing) are in fact considerably slower than the quantized time model of quantum physics. The fundamental time versus the geometric time is considerable, as to suggest that we emerge from complex structures of the
fundamental statistical averages, into the three-dimensional phenomenon of our own perception, smeared if you like as a projection slowely evaluating moments in time, whilst the fundemental time vanishes and reapears just as quick in [latex]10^{-44}[/latex]. My perception of the world at large then, is not only not the three-dimensional world at large but some holographic presentation of consciousness, but fundamental isn't even effective in the speed of consciousness, meaning we effectively cannot be within it's strict temporal rules, but we mysteriously seem to be an emergent property of it.
The point of all this? Well, going back to whether ''the universe cares'' becomes irrelevent. Why?
Since above we can clearly state we ourselves, these complex bioforms of carbon and electrons, which can ask such questions due to a level of conscious intelligence, then if we truely are an emergent property of the fundamental time (as described under metric physics), then we are actually not all that independant of the vacuum itself. No surprise really, since we require vacuum flucuations to even have a consciousness, these some [latex]10^{26}[/latex] particles that whizz around inside of my head. We by definition, are the vacuum; a conscious emergent property of vacuum ingredients. So in a sense, the vacuum does care, because essentially, we are the vacuum. If one completely dismisses that our consciousness has no ties to the world at large, are greately mistaken. Our very thoughts could even be emergent properties of the ZPF as according to Shiuji Inomata, a Japanese scientist who has worked on the theories of ZPF for many years now.
The fact we observe the world, is evidence enough that what we are seeing is a description of a reality which seems real to us. Nothing more counts really from a philosophical mannor, for, what would reality really account for if there was no conscious observer to measure its beauty and vastness?