1. The Postulate of Perfect Memory: A Lossless Archive
Human consciousness retains all experiential data in full fidelity throughout life; no bit of sensory, emotional, or cognitive memory is ever lost, only rendered temporarily inaccessible to waking awareness.
2. The Postulate of Space-Memory Equivalence: The Environment as the Memory of Space
At every moment of conscious awareness, the surrounding spatial environment is encoded directly into memory as a unified structure; therefore, current space is indistinguishable from the memory of the moment - it is the memory.
3. The Postulate of the Zero-Dimensional Self: Consciousness as the Point of Origin
Conscious awareness emanates from a zero-dimensional point - an indivisible center of perception - from which all experience of space, time, and identity is projected. This point, dimensionless yet infinitely aware, is the origin and anchor of one's personal universe.
4. The Postulate of the Personal Spacetime Continuum: Memory as a Four-Dimensional Realm
An individual's total memory constitutes a complete time-space continuum - an internally consistent, four-dimensional reality uniquely structured by that person's lived experiences, perceptions, and awareness. This continuum contains the entirety of that individual's universe.
5. The Postulate of Dimensional Rebirth at Death: Consciousness Entering Four-Dimensional Space
Death marks the point in time when zero-dimensional consciousness - formerly bound to three-dimensional space and linear time - undergoes a dimensional change into four-dimensional spacetime. This event, termed rebirth, initiates a state in which all past experience becomes simultaneously accessible within a unified continuum.
6. The Postulate of Eternalization of the Final Moment: Consciousness is Transformed into an Eternal, Four-Dimensional Afterlife
At the moment of death, consciousness halts in temporal sequence but expands dimensionally into an eternal experiential field. The final moment, though finite in time, becomes infinite in subjectively, transforming into a four-dimensional reality relative to the individual.
7. The Postulate of The Three States of Consciousness: Consciousness is A Dimensional Model of the Self
Consciousness can only exists in one of three states - zero-dimensional (0D), three-dimensional (3D), or four-dimensional (4D). These three modes define the only forms through which conscious awareness can manifest.
8. The Postulate of Dimensional Consciousness: Afterlife and Memory Are Equai
The final state of consciousness at death, where the self expands from 0D to 4D, is dimensionally identical to memory.
1. Awareness
Consciousness is awareness localized in the body - but that awareness is not the body itself. The distinction between the two points toward an underlying dimensional framework, where awareness can shift beyond the confines of neural circuits.
2. Proof by Birth
Birth shows that consciousness can emerge into a body from apparent non-being. Why assume that the reverse - exiting the body - means erasure? Dimensional symmetry suggests rebirth into a higher mode, not annihilation.
3. Geometry
The model of dimensional transfer (point → space → spacetime) mirrors geometric principles. A 0D point has no size, but infinite potential directions of expansion. Consciousness, as a point, may be capable of geometrically expanding beyond the skull - into a field state, then a timeless state.
4. Memory
Memory is not merely recall - it's spatially structured. Memories often include environmental detail and emotional context, suggesting memory may exist as an interaction between mind and space. At death, memory may no longer be stored but inhabited, much like a location.
5. Information
Consciousness processes information, but is not reducible to it. Information theory shows that data can exist independently of a substrate. If so, consciousness as an informational pattern may survive physical substrate dissolution, shifting into a new dimensional medium.
6. Programming
The brain may act like a runtime environment for a deeper consciousness program. At death, this "program" doesn't terminate, but rather exits the machine and continues in a more universal operating system - space-time itself.
1. Out-of-Body Experience (OBE)
OBEs show consciousness existing outside the body. If real, they are evidence that the mind is not bound to brain matter. Afterlife Theory sees OBE as the first stage of the dimensional shift: from point to space.
2. Near-Death Experience (NDE)
NDEs expand on OBEs with non-linear time, life reviews, and communication beyond language. They offer the clearest reports of 4D consciousness - awareness not just outside the body, but outside linear time.
3. Virtual Reality
VR mimics spatial immersion, showing that self-location is programmable. This suggests the "I" is not fixed in the body but is movable by perception. OBEs and afterlife states may be native VR states, except rendered by reality itself.
4. Hyperthymesia
Individuals with total recall challenge the model of memory as limited storage. If memory can be this total in life, then in death - freed from neural constraints - it may become omnitemporal: the ability to access all moments, not just past ones.