This work attempts to outline a philosophical foundation for the informational age. It proceeds from the hypothesis that physics, mathematics, computation, biology, cognition, consciousness, and artificial intelligence are not isolated domains, but different projections of a deeper structure: constrained relational dynamics. Information is interpreted not primarily as data, but as restriction over possibility. Structure emerges through distinction, constraint, balance, selection, and stabilization. Meaning emerges through semantic compression. Intelligence appears as adaptive modeling under constraint. Consciousness is treated not as the center of ontology, but as one of its higher expressions: a recursive semantic architecture that aligns internal models with the constraints of reality. The aim is not to present a final theory. It is to formulate an ontological direction for a civilization increasingly shaped by information, computation, artificial intelligence, and the convergence of science and engineering.
Vladimir Yakunin (Sun,) studied this question.