This work presents the discovery of the illuminational informational nature of reality, a paradigm that fundamentally redefines the foundations of modern science. The theory proposes that reality does not originate from matter, energy, or spacetime, but from illumination — the act of revealing minimal possibilities of existence, called ilons. Through a structured sequence of transformations (possibility → difference → illumination → relation → structure → information → world → life → consciousness), the theory establishes information as the primary ontological substrate from which physical, biological, and cognitive phenomena emerge. The illuminational informational framework introduces a mathematical core based on four symbolic constructs: K4 (the minimal complete relational network), phi (the intrinsic coefficient of natural organization), 7 (the minimal number of illumination stages), and the Basin (the space of all ilons). Together, these elements form a generative architecture that explains the emergence of structure, complexity, life, and consciousness. The theory challenges reductionism and replaces it with organizationalism, asserting that phenomena arise from relational organization rather than from elementary particles. It provides a unified ontological and mathematical foundation with implications for physics, cosmology, biology, cognitive science, information theory, and philosophy. This manifesto outlines the conceptual and mathematical structure of the theory and establishes it as a new scientific paradigm. Author: Waldemar Superson
Waldemar Superson (Wed,) studied this question.