DESCRIPTION / ABSTRACT This paper presents Layer 5 of the author’s six-layered framework of reality and develops a biologically grounded model of spirituality, meaning, healing, identity, suffering, resilience, and the soul. Building upon the earlier layers involving cosmology, consciousness, and evolution, the present work proposes that the human organism is best understood as a cooperative cellular civilization governed through hierarchical signalling, shared survival structures, and organism-level coordination. The paper argues that many phenomena traditionally categorized as spiritual, psychological, or philosophical emerge from measurable biological and informational dynamics operating across multiple scales of living organization. Concepts such as purpose, hope, belief, motivation, coherence, and internal contradiction are reframed as functional regulatory variables capable of influencing cellular cooperation, long-term resilience, health trajectories, and survival outcomes. The framework integrates evidence and reasoning from systems biology, psychoneuroimmunology, interoception, placebo research, evolutionary organization, collective intelligence, consciousness studies, and large-scale biological cooperation. The paper also develops a functional interpretation of the soul as continuity-preserving informational architecture rather than a supernatural abstraction. Additionally, the work introduces falsifiable predictions and computational modelling approaches, including population simulations examining the long-term effects of meaning-anchor structures, psychological coherence, and periodic reinforcement under stochastic adversity conditions. The framework proposes that spirituality can be investigated scientifically through organism-level signalling quality, cooperative cellular regulation, future-oriented stability structures, and continuity dynamics across living systems.
V. K. Sharma (Sun,) studied this question.