The book “The Law of Existence” offers answers to three basic existential questions, which to date have not been given in the framework of natural sciences, philosophy, or theology. Those questions are:
- What exists?
- How does it exist?
- Why does it exist?
THE LAW OF EXISTENCE = I + 7
As an introduction to the mentioned topic, to get the reader interested, we will immediately offer a short answer to the first existential question “what exists”. Only Consciousness exists, which calls itself by the name “I”, and its seven physical and psychological abilities and actions, which are the basic natural law according to which everything happens and everything exists in the infinite celestial space.
The correct definition of Consciousness is – that which is capable of bringing itself into a state of awareness. To succeed in this, the condition is that it has five psychological abilities – observation, feeling, memory, thinking, and comprehension – with which it gains experience, i.e. knowledge about itself, and by means of which it brings itself into a state of awareness and in this way causes itself as Consciousness.
But since Consciousness is not material, because it manifests itself as a universal immaterial field, known in physics under the name “quantum vacuum”, about which no experience, i.e. knowledge, can be gained, it is necessary for Consciousness to also have two physical abilities of exertion and movement (“big bang” theory), by means of which it acquires the physical properties of force and mass and thus becomes the object of its experience and awareness.
The answers to the questions of how Consciousness exists and why, follow in the book The Law of Existence, in the form of logical conclusions that arise from the inevitable alternating cause-and-effect connection between physical and psychological actions, which Consciousness begins to perform after the big bang. And by means of them it evolves, i.e. it creates organized systems of its exertion, movement, and work, such as atoms, celestial bodies, galaxies, and finally, bodies of cells, plants, animals, and people.