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Existence, Complexity and Truth in a Finite Universe

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Preprints.org
DOI
10.20944/preprints202505.1779.v3

The article explores an epistemological framework for understanding existence, symmetry, complexity, and randomness as emergent phenomena arising when a large-but-finite complex totality is represented through lower-complexity observational subsystems. We propose that existence is not a binary property, but an epistemological category determined by the measure of a system's structural symmetry over time. Chaos, randomness, and infinity are reinterpreted as epistemic markers --- thresholds of comprehension rather than fundamental properties of reality. Through this lens, we examine fractals, cellular automata, and quantum uncertainty, arguing that apparent uncertainty emerges from the compression of finite universal structure into observable forms. The article argues that all localized systems, from particles to cognitive processes, are projections of the universe's total informational structure. This paradigm reframes emergence, not as the accumulation of local interactions, but as the revelation of global coherence through representational compression. By situating existence and complexity within this framework, the manifesto outlines a programme-level foundation for understanding the interconnectedness of phenomena and the unity of the universe as a singular, self-reflective process.

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