This article presents a critical–propositional analysis of Guanyi Liu’s The Hypothesis of Sensory and Dimensional Evolution in confrontation with the Theory of Objectivity (TO). The study examines Liu’s central claim that sensory evolution is intrinsically linked to dimensional cognition and that the reality perceived by intelligent beings depends on biologically selected perceptual channels. From the standpoint of the modal discipline of the Theory of Objectivity, the article evaluates the extent to which Liu’s framework can be integrated, corrected, or limited. The paper argues that Liu’s proposal contains significant insights regarding observation, informational compression, cognitive plurality, quantum interpretation, and the Fermi paradox. In particular, it highlights the value of Liu’s suggestion that different forms of intelligence may access different phenomenal regimes of the same universe according to their sensory constitution. At the same time, the article shows that Liu’s ontological framework remains modally underfounded, since it presupposes a high-dimensional noumenon and perceptual decoding structures without first deriving the minimal conditions of existence, distinction, boundary, composition, and transcendence. In response, the article proposes a TO-based reformulation: sensory evolution should not be understood as the origin of reality, but as the historically conditioned diversification of phenomenal actualization regimes through which intelligent units capture and organize bands of objective informational transcendence. Thus, Liu’s hypothesis is relocated within the Era of Intelligent Units and reread through the concepts of phenomenic elements, Inductive Effects, the cosmogonic theorem of TO, and the transcendent element as information or atomic radiation. The result is a disciplined dialogue between an original contemporary hypothesis and the modal ontology of the Theory of Objectivity, contributing to broader debates on perception, cognition, quantum theory, cosmology, and the possibility of a new physics. Keywords Theory of Objectivity; Guanyi Liu; sensory evolution; dimensional cognition; phenomenic elements; Inductive Effects; modal ontology; quantum mechanics; observer effect; Fermi paradox; informational transcendence; cosmology; philosophy of physics; perception; ontology.
Cabannas et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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