This paper presents Relational Information Theory (RIT), a new foundational framework for physics that resolves the emergence of spacetime and energy from informational structures. Unlike traditional models that focus on observers and inherent status , RIT defines existence as a trinary relation between physical systems, where energy is the physical manifestation of informational density. Key developments in this work include: The Trinary Framework: A logical model where physical reality is composed of wavefunctions, but their interactions and "manifestation" are treated as three-part relations rather than isolated entities. Information-Energy Identity: A formal mapping that shows how physical energy and mass arise directly from the density of information within a system. The Master Update Rule: A new model for time and change that uses a threshold-driven trigger, explaining why some systems stay stable while others evolve. Quantum Gravity and Spacetime: A derivation of a linear area spectrum for black holes that aligns with established thermodynamics while offering new insights into the "pixels" of space. Resolution of the Measurement Problem: Treating decoherence as a physical phase transition, removing the need for an "observer" in quantum mechanics. Keywords: Physics, Quantum Gravity, Information Theory, Spacetime, Relational Information Theory, Decoherence, Theory of Everything, Theoretical Physics, Relational Theory, Relational Information Theory, Phase Transition, Emergent Time, Emergent Gravity, Emergent Spacetime
McGill Aidan (Wed,) studied this question.