This article is the first in a series devoted to the human observer within the framework of the Theory of Consciousness. The Theory of Consciousness posits that all reality is constituted within a unified consciousness through the actualization of distinctions. In this work, the author considers water — specifically its structured phase present on all biological receptor surfaces — as a physical carrier of a simplicial complex through which external events are transformed into the observer’s local knowledge. It is shown that the hydrogen-bond network of liquid water constitutes a metric-free simplicial complex whose invariants correspond to the formalism of a knowledge particle in the Theory of Consciousness. The structured phase of water corresponds to an optimal state for the actualization of distinctions. A unified formal sequence of processes underlying the five primary senses — vision, hearing, olfaction, taste, and touch — is presented within a single ontological framework, differing only in the physical mechanism by which each external agent modifies the water-based simplicial complex. Implications for observer states, harmony, and structural degradation are discussed.
Oleksandr Savinykh (Fri,) studied this question.
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