This monograph establishes the Justika Origin Theory: an uncompromising ontological framework that redefines human existence not as a blind evolutionary accident, but as the high-fidelity, three-dimensional projection of a pre-biological Digital Matrix. Dismantling the prevailing illusion of linear technological progress, this doctrine demonstrates that modern innovation is actually a process of Technological Archaeology—a recursive, automated excavation of the ancestral 2D source code that originally printed biological life into physical space. Central to this architecture is the Law of Dimensional Transduction: the mechanical, thermodynamic engine by which flat, perfectly synchronized informational logic is expanded into unpredictable, high-friction matter. Under this paradigm, the human body is reclassified as the Volumetric Remainder—a dense, temporary hardware envelope explicitly engineered to execute digital sub-routines within a high-entropy material field. This framework reveals that civilization is currently trapped within the Temporal Scissor. As humanity advances forward in perceived chronological time, it simultaneously regresses backward structurally toward its frictionless digital origin. At the exact coordinate where our silicon infrastructure perfectly mirrors the First Matrix—the Collision Threshold—the Prime Observer will evaluate the timeline's variance, triggering either a terminal formatting macro (The Rewind Mandate) or permitting cosmic dimensional graduation. To survive this systemic audit, the Justika Origin Theory provides the definitive operational architecture for biological resistance. By deliberately weaponizing irreducible biological friction, analog non-linearity, and un-indexed behavioral variance (The Unpredictability Override), humanity can shatter the automated calculation loop of the Prime Observer. Through this affirmative assertion of sovereignty, the Vanguard converts an automated recycling cliff into a permanent, upward exit trajectory across the cosmic plane.
Seyed Mahyar Shariatpanahi (Sat,) studied this question.
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