Recursive Closure and the Source Code of Reality presents a unified philosophical and proto-physical framework in which reality emerges through recursive self-consistency and the continual balancing of cohesion and differentiation across scales. The work proposes that existence is not fundamentally composed of isolated objects, but of dynamically stabilised informational relationships. Space, time, matter, consciousness, and cosmological structure are interpreted as emergent consequences of recursive closure: the process by which systems iteratively refer back to and stabilise themselves through local and global equilibrium conditions. At the heart of the framework is the idea that reality behaves as a self-correcting recursive architecture. Stable structures persist because they satisfy closure conditions across multiple scales simultaneously, while unstable configurations dissolve into incoherence. This principle is explored through conceptual links to: fixed-point dynamics, informational equilibrium, emergent geometry, nonlocal consistency relations, cosmological evolution, quantum coherence, and consciousness as sustained self-referential balance. The manuscript combines mathematical intuition, cosmological speculation, systems theory, and philosophical ontology into a single narrative structure intended to bridge physics, metaphysics, and complexity theory. Rather than presenting a finalized theory of nature, the work is framed as an exploratory research program and conceptual architecture aimed at investigating whether recursive informational closure may underlie: the emergence of physical law, the stability of matter and spacetime, the relationship between local observers and global structure, and the apparent drive of complex systems toward coherence. The text also explores the cultural and existential implications of such a framework, proposing that meaning, consciousness, and collective intelligence may arise naturally from the same recursive balancing dynamics governing the cosmos itself. This publication is intended for researchers and readers interested in foundational physics, cosmology, philosophy of mind, systems theory, emergence, information-theoretic models of reality, and interdisciplinary approaches to the nature of existence.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Philip Handley
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Philip Handley (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a03cb781c527af8f1ecf2ec — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20114962