This essay reconstructs the genealogy of the Omega theory from its origins in the concept of Anujīvat (Microvitum) to its later formalization as a teleological field theory. It argues that the Omega operators did not arise as an isolated mathematical invention, but from the attempt to clarify the formative tendencies originally attributed to Microvita. The development proceeds through several conceptual stages: self-reference (a ↔ ia) as the minimal condition of coherence; attention, meta-attention, and Zeno dynamics as mechanisms of selection, stabilization, and transformation; the Sarkar–Harman convergence as a fourfold transformational space; teleological semantics as a theory of trajectories and attractors; and teleological curvature as the emergent geometry of meaning. Artificial semantic fields provide the decisive methodological shift. They do not prove the ontological existence of Microvita, but they make Microvita-like effects—attractor formation, coherence shifts, directional transformations, semantic convergence, and field curvature—modelable and experimentally approachable. The later differentiation of Ω into Ω₁–Ω₄, and the bifurcation of Ω₄ into Ω₄⁺ and Ω₄⁻, extends the framework from consciousness and semantic organization to culture, history, and violence. The essay concludes that the movement from अ to Ω expresses a general insight: across multiple scales, from self-reference and semantic organization to consciousness, culture, and history, coherence emerges through operators acting upon relational structures.
Hans-Joachim Rudolph (Wed,) studied this question.