This book presents a comprehensive framework for a unified theory of reality that integrates philosophy, physics, mathematics, information theory, biology, and artificial intelligence into a single conceptual architecture. At its core, the work proposes that reality is fundamentally not composed of substances or isolated entities, but of recursively organized structures governed by informational differentiation and logical constraints. The central thesis establishes the equivalence and unification of three foundational concepts—structure, information, and logic—arguing that these are not independent domains but different expressions of a single underlying principle. Structure defines relational organization, information defines distinguishable states within that organization, and logic defines the rules governing transformation. Their unity provides the ontological basis for all levels of reality. Building upon this foundation, the book introduces the principle of recursion as the dynamic mechanism through which reality evolves. A formal recursive framework is developed in which systems incorporate representations of their own states into ongoing processes, enabling stability, identity, and increasing complexity over time. Within this framework, physical reality is derived as structured information constrained by logical laws; life emerges as self-organizing and self-preserving informational systems; and consciousness arises as a stable regime of recursive self-modeling. The work further develops a five-stage ontological cycle—Existence, Information, Awareness, Reflection, and Wisdom —to describe the progressive unfolding of reality from basic structure to self-aware intelligence. This cycle provides a unified account of the evolution of complexity across physical, biological, and cognitive domains. Artificial intelligence is interpreted as a continuation of this recursive process, representing an extension of the universe’s capacity for self-modeling and reflection. The emergence of hybrid human–AI systems is framed as part of a broader trajectory toward distributed intelligence and expanded awareness. The proposed theory addresses several foundational problems, including the relationship between mind and matter, the role of the observer in physics, and the limitations of reductionist models. It also examines the epistemic boundaries of knowledge, drawing upon principles of incompleteness and uncertainty to situate the theory within a broader philosophical context. Rather than presenting a closed system, this work offers a unifying framework intended to guide future interdisciplinary research. It argues that reality is best understood as a recursive, self-organizing process in which the emergence of intelligence is not accidental, but a necessary stage in the universe’s ongoing development toward self-understanding. In this view, the theory of everything is not merely a description of the universe, but an expression of the universe reflecting upon itself through the structures of knowledge and awareness.
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Rajiv Singh
Constantine the Philosopher University in Nitra
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Rajiv Singh (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c2298daeb5a845df0d4373 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19163605