Reality

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Definition

Reality is the creative and evolutionary unitarian process of self-organization of the universal network of events, through which the Force, the fundamental causal entity, the source of the existence of Forms, expresses itself.

Common definition

In philosophy, reality is the state of things as they actually exist, rather than as they may appear or might be imagined. In a wider definition, reality includes everything that is and has been, whether or not it is observable or comprehensible. A still more broad definition includes everything that has existed, exists, or will exist.

Description

It is the formation of Reality, whose emerging product, the Universe, constantly evolves towards increasing levels of complexity, of organization of the Information.

Reality includes every event, every form, everything that exists, has existed or will exist. The property of existence does not apply only to material forms but also to immaterial forms that characterize the internal and external organization of living beings. We refer, in particular, to the sets of relationships that build ecosystems, to the complex information that represents the instinctive, cultural, economic, psychological and social aspects of living forms, to the thinking and the exclusive creations of the human mind.

Reality is the everything. It includes the endless creative and evolutionary activity that continuously builds the Universe, the time section we call 'the present'. Reality shows no causal, spatial and temporal dimensional limits; it includes the past as the set of causes that act, the present, as the Universe in evolution, and the future, as a set of potentialities, the 'possible causal adjacent', subject to the incessant exploration by the co-evolutives, cooperative and competitive, processes, that build the Universe.

Reality has no sense or finality other than the manifestation of the Force itself in all possible Forms.

Units of measurement

Classification

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  • Semantic Map: ekm|
  • Semantic Map Test Version: ekmt|

See also

Notes

References

External links