This monograph advances a cumulative philosophical argument for what it terms the ‘readability thesis’: the claim that the universe exhibits persistent structural compatibility with intelligibility, symbolic information, consciousness, moral awareness, and existential orientation in a manner that exceeds what a purely mechanistic account of nature can coherently explain. The argument does not proceed from alleged gaps in scientific explanation—a strategy that remains permanently vulnerable to the progress of inquiry—but rather from the philosophically significant convergence of phenomena that collectively suggest a deeper ontological orientation within the fabric of existence itself. Drawing on resources from philosophy of science, philosophy of mind, metaphysics, and Qurʾānic epistemology, the work develops its thesis across three interconnected investigations. Part One examines the intelligibility of the cosmos: the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics, the informational architecture of biological systems, and the extraordinary precision of cosmological fine- tuning. Part Two turns to the interior dimensions of existence: the irreducibility of subjective consciousness, the epistemological problem posed by the human orientation toward truth, the phenomenology of moral obligation and aesthetic experience, and the universal human confrontation with mortality and transcendence. Part Three situates these inquiries within the framework of Qurʾānic epistemology, arguing that the classical Islamic concept of āyāt—reality as a field of intelligible signs—provides a philosophically sophisticated account of how nature, consciousness, and revelation may be understood as interconnected dimensions of communicative intelligibility. The study concludes by arguing for tawḥīd—divine unity—not merely as theological assertion but as the most coherent metaphysical explanation for why reality consistently and cumulatively discloses rather than conceals. The work engages throughout with thinkers including Eugene Wigner, Thomas Nagel, David Chalmers, Alvin Plantinga, Roger Penrose, Paul Davies, Viktor Frankl, Charles Taylor, David Bentley Hart, Toshihiko Izutsu, Muḥammad Iqbal, Seyyed Hossein Nasr, and Fazlur Rahman, among others.
Oruj Ismayilov (Sat,) studied this question.