About
This site
This site presents the Consciousness of the Real (CdR) corpus, its reading tools, its complementary documents, and its discussion spaces.
CdR proposes an interdisciplinary reconstruction of reality from a minimal certainty: perceiving change. This reconstruction does not consist in bringing together domains that are already separate, but in taking reality back to its base in order to show how domains themselves appear as differentiated levels of the same generative coherence.
It serves as an entry point to the corpus, a documentation base, a consultation space, and a guide to the developments associated with the project.
The Consciousness of the Real corpus
The corpus is the core of the site. It presents the concepts, structuring hypotheses, articulations between domains, internal dependencies, and coherence conditions of the CdR framework.
It is organized into sections, documents, and illustrations in order to allow a progressive reading, from the foundations to more specialized domains. The corpus should therefore be read first in order to fully understand the other contents of the site.
What CdR is not
- A philosophical doctrine or a purely symbolic interpretation of reality.
- An argument from authority : every statement must remain open to discussion, verification, or refutation.
- A scientific consensus : CdR is a structured proposal, open to critical examination.
Project objectives
- Describe a foundation of internal constraints capable of generating observable structures.
- Identify invariants, relations, scales, constants, symmetries, and geometries, then verify their coherence.
- Provide a structured, readable, and traceable corpus, accompanied by formalism and illustrations.
- Document tests, hypotheses, limitations, open issues, and conditions under which the model would fail.
Positioning
CdR is an independent work, not affiliated with an academic, commercial, or industrial institution. It follows a theoretical, critical, and constructive approach, with priority given to clarity, traceability, and reproducibility when numerical tests are involved.
The project should therefore be judged by the coherence of its reconstruction, its capacity to make intelligible structures appear, and its resistance to objections rather than by external authority or institutional affiliation.
Site structure
- CdR : the main corpus, organized by sections and logical progression.
- Glossary : concise definitions of the notions, symbols, and terms used in the corpus.
- Publications & repositories : texts, preprints, repositories, identifiers, and archives.
- Search : internal search across the site pages and documents.
- Forum : a space for discussion, questions, critiques, and clarifications.
- Social groups : collective spaces with private forums for organizing specific work, exchanges, or collaborations.
The Publications & repositories section does not cover the whole corpus. It presents certain developments, consequences, or specific extensions. It should therefore be understood as a complement to the corpus, not as a substitute for it.
Forum and archiving
The forum accompanies the corpus without replacing it. It makes it possible to ask questions, report difficulties, discuss certain hypotheses, and preserve a trace of clarifications. The dedicated forum page describes its structure and participation spaces in greater detail.
The site also supports the creation of social groups. These groups may have a private forum, allowing them to organize exchanges, work, or collaborations that require a reserved space.
Exchanges held in the scientific section of the forum are periodically deposited on Zenodo. These deposits serve to archive discussions, preserve the history of contributions, and provide proof of priority for participants.
Languages
All corpus content is written in French and then fully translated into English before publication. The site is therefore available in FR/EN. Forum messages are also translated into both languages by an AI specially trained for the corpus, so that French-speaking and English-speaking readers can follow the exchanges.
Access and participation
Public reading makes it possible to consult the corpus, the associated documents, and part of the exchanges. Registration is required to participate in discussions, ask questions, or reply on the forum.
The most useful contributions are those that clarify a point, report a difficulty, formulate an objection, propose a correction, or clearly indicate the document, image, or notion concerned.