This article advances a theory that positions consciousness as the ontological foundation of reality, rejecting subject–object dualism. It argues that distinguishability presupposes consciousness and cannot be grounded in a mind-independent realm. Consciousness is modeled as a unified topological space capable of self-differentiation, where distinctions are actualized through intention and awareness and stabilized as regular closed sets representing knowledge. Within this harmonized structure, observation emerges as a co-dependent triad of observer, observation, and observed. The observer is defined as a stable localization of distinctions; time and space are reinterpreted as local knowledge structures specific to the observer. Structural changes within consciousness are communicated via the «light of consciousness», preserving non-duality. The framework unifies distinguishability, knowledge, multiplicity, and observability while maintaining the absolute unity of consciousness. It does not seek to replace empirical science but to clarify its deepest ontological presuppositions.
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Oleksandr Savinykh
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Oleksandr Savinykh (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/699fe37b95ddcd3a253e76da — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18763069
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