Structured overview of the c² Model of Realities
The c² Model of Realities is an ontological framework for the description of physical reality based on information. It assumes that physical dynamics are not fundamental, but emerge from a deeper, non-dynamic structure.
Base Reality (BR) is not spatial, not temporal and not causally structured. It does not represent a physical world, but a consistent ontological structure. Concepts such as extension, duration or motion have no meaning on this level.
Sub-Reality (SR) is the level of physical appearance. Space, time, energy, fields and dynamics are properties of this level. SR is not fundamental, but emerges through projection from Base Reality.
Consciousness Reality (CR) describes the level of integrated experience, meaning and self-reference. It is not reducible to neural processes, but emerges as a projective feedback within physical reality.
In the model, the operator c² does not primarily function as a physical constant, but as a projective coupling rule. It translates informational structure into physical dynamics and determines how ontological constraints appear as energy, time and causality.
Time is not considered a fundamental quantity in the c² Model, but an ordering measure within Sub-Reality. The Big Bang does not represent an absolute beginning, but a projection boundary at which physical concepts lose their applicability.
The c² Model does not claim to be a complete physical theory. Instead, it provides a consistent ontological framework intended to make the conceptual foundations of existing theories explicit, rather than replacing them.