Model of Multidimensional Reality
Model of Multidimensional Reality

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Model of Multidimensional Reality

Язык: Русский
Год издания: 2026
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Серия «The Human Being as a Multilevel System»
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This book chooses the second path.

There is one more foundation for this choice, and it is important to name it before entering the next chapter.

In this book I consider the world to be dual-aspect: material and spiritual.

Within the framework of this book, I proceed from the assumption that every stable phenomenon can be considered as having not only a material side, but also a corresponding metaphysical side.

This is not a conclusion of the natural sciences. It is not proof obtained from life coincidences, an inner voice or recurring scenarios. It is my starting metaphysical position: the assumption from which the further model will unfold.

The material description is necessary. It holds the body, heredity, environment, memory, family history, social conditions, the work of the nervous system, real causes and real consequences of actions.

But I do not want to assume in advance that this exhausts the whole human being.

The spiritual aspect in this book will not be presented as an established object. It will become the second horizon of the question. Not a ready-made answer, but a possibility of looking at the human being more broadly, without devaluing what is already explained by the body, the psyche and the environment.

Therefore, further on, scientific descriptions will hold the observable form and mechanism, while philosophical-esoteric language will hold the possible meaning, inner directedness and spiritual function of what is happening.

Further on, we will enter the authorial hypothesis of the multilevel human being. In it, a bold analogy will appear between the hidden multidimensionality of the physical picture of the world and the esoteric image of subtle bodies. In it, there will be a temptation to see proof where there is only a model. Therefore, beside every strong image there will be a boundary.

We will try to tell this hypothesis in such a way that it does not lose its force, but also does not cross the boundary of honesty.

The next step is to enter the first large hypothesis. The point where the modern language of hidden dimensions first meets the ancient image of the multilayered human being. Not as proof. Not as religion. But as the beginning of an authorial model that must itself show what it can explain, where its limits are, and why it was needed at all.



Model of Multidimensional Reality: The Contours of a Broad Hypothesis

After the Question

When a person begins to observe his life more attentively, simple explanations start to feel too narrow.

He sees that similar actions do not produce identical results. He recognizes recurring scenarios. He feels that some activities gather him, while others empty him, even if from the outside they may look right.

It does not follow from this that one must immediately believe in a hidden system of the world.

But something else does follow: the human being begins to need a larger model.

Not necessarily a final one. Not necessarily a proven one. Not necessarily one that can be presented as a scientific theory. But one that at least tries to hold together what falls apart in an ordinary explanation: body, lineage, environment, repetition, inner correspondence, meaning, time, destiny as an image of trajectory, and a personal task as a question rather than a ready-made answer.

A larger model almost always begins with a bold assumption.

It wants to gather everything at once. It feels as if, once a common image has been found, that image already explains the world. It takes scientific terms, esoteric maps, personal experiences, biological processes, cosmic analogies and tries to connect them into a single architecture. There is danger in this. But there is also force.

Because a broad hypothesis matters not only by whether each of its parts can be confirmed at once.

It also matters by the scale of the question it reveals.

In this book I propose to call such a model the Model of Multidimensional Reality.

The Desire to Gather the Human Being as a Whole

The idea of the Model of Multidimensional Reality does not arise from a desire to add one more mystery to the world.

Its initial impulse is simpler: the human being does not seem flat.

If we look at a person only as a body, the inner history is lost. If we look only as psyche, heredity, bodily organization, environment and biological sensitivity are lost. If we look only as a social role, a strange personal depth disappears: the feeling that life has not only external circumstances, but also a task. If we look only esoterically, there is a risk of naming an image reality too quickly and ceasing to distinguish where there is experience, where there is symbol, where there is hypothesis and where there is fact.

The proposed hypothesis tries to do something difficult: to hold everything together.

It contains the body and heredity.

It contains the moment of conception as a special point at the beginning of individual life.

It contains the idea that a person enters the world not only with a set of genes, but also with a certain configuration of conditions.

It contains subtle bodies as an image of the levels of the human being.

It contains chakras as a traditional map of the connection between the body and the inner state.

It contains the monad or soul as an image of an individual program.

It contains an attempt to connect recurring scenarios not only with habit or trauma, but also with a deeper task.

It contains the intuition that a person is included in the world more broadly than we are accustomed to thinking.

Such a construction cannot be presented as a proven theory. It joins different languages: physics, biology, psychology, esotericism, philosophy. Therefore it risks passing analogy off as mechanism, image as fact, inner coherence as proof.

But if the claim to being proven is removed, an important gesture remains.

That gesture says:

the human being needs to be thought of as a multilayered system, not as a lonely object accidentally placed in the world.

This is where the book begins.

Model of Multidimensional Reality as Architecture

The word "matrix" is important here not as technical proof, but as an image.

A matrix is not simply a separate cause. It is a structure of mutual arrangement among elements. In the proposed hypothesis, the human being is understood as the result of the intersection of several lines: ancestral, bodily, cosmic, personal, psychological and symbolic.

In a rough form, one can say this: a person does not appear out of emptiness.

He comes through parents, and therefore through heredity, ancestral history, bodily capacities and limitations.

He appears at a particular moment and in a particular environment, which means that from the very beginning his life is inscribed into a concrete configuration of the world.

He carries not only a set of reactions, but also an inner task, which esoteric language might call the soul or monad, while a more careful language may call it an image of an individual program.

He lives not only through events, but also through recurring patterns.

He not only acts, but also stabilizes experience: holds meaning, gathers memory, forms continuity, tries to understand why precisely these situations return precisely to him.

The Model of Multidimensional Reality connects these lines into a single drawing.

Its force lies in its scale.

Its risk lies in its speed.

If this architecture is accepted too quickly, the temptation appears to see a ready-made mechanism at once where, for now, there is only a general drawing.

Therefore, further on, the Model of Multidimensional Reality will be treated as an authorial speculative architecture: not as an established fact, but as a working image of the larger model.

Two Aspects of the World

Before moving further, the starting position must be named directly.

The Model of Multidimensional Reality proceeds from the principle of corresponding manifestation: every stable phenomenon may be considered as having material and metaphysical sides.

The material side describes the form, structure and observable dynamics of the phenomenon. The metaphysical side is not presented as an established object: it is introduced as a language of possible meaning, inner causality, informational connectedness and spiritual function.

Here the human being is understood not only as a biological organism, but also as a multilayered system in which the bodily, the psychic, the symbolic and the spiritual form different levels of one reality.

This is not a conclusion of physics. Not the result of laboratory experience. Not a hidden fact extracted from M-theory. And not a demand with which the reader must agree in advance.

It is the author's metaphysical assumption.

It arises from the sense that the material description of the world is necessary, but does not necessarily exhaust all the questions a person encounters. Science can study the body, heredity, environment, development, the work of the brain, patterns of behavior, the physical conditions of life. It does this where there are observable consequences, measurements, testable hypotheses and the possibility of correcting error.

But the boundaries of the scientific method do not imply that the spiritual aspect has been proven.

Nor do they imply the opposite: as if it had been proven that no spiritual aspect can exist.

Thus a space for philosophical choice appears. One can accept only the material description as sufficient. One can consider the question open. Or one can, as the author of this book does, try to build a dual-aspect model in which the material and the spiritual do not destroy one another.

It is important not to confuse this step with proof.

I am not saying: the spiritual aspect is established.

I am saying: let us consider what happens to the model of the human being if we do not close this question in advance.

The Model of Multidimensional Reality is born precisely in this space.

It tries to place two horizons side by side.

The first horizon is material. Here belong the body, heredity, the moment at which individual development begins, environment, real processes of regulation, scientific descriptions of nature and theoretical models of physics.

The second horizon is metaphysical and spiritual. Here belong esoteric maps of the human being, the language of subtle bodies, monad, karma, destiny, individual task and inner path.

The Model of Multidimensional Reality does not turn the second horizon into a scientific fact.

It tries to build an authorial bridge between the horizons.

Two Maps of Invisible Multilayeredness

At the center of the Model of Multidimensional Reality stands one especially strong analogy.

On one side, there is the modern scientific-theoretical language in which reality can be thought of more broadly than immediate experience. For example, M-theory is connected with an eleven-dimensional description. If one compares it with the familiar four-dimensional picture of space-time, then one is speaking of seven additional dimensions. In popular retelling this often sounds like this: the observable world may not exhaust the mathematical picture of reality.

It is important to say at once: this is not an everyday fact and not proof of esotericism. This is a field of complex theoretical physics. It does not speak about the human soul, subtle bodies, chakras or destiny. It was not created in order to explain the inner life of the human being.

But it gives a powerful image: the visible does not necessarily exhaust the structure of reality.

On the other side, there are esoteric and spiritual traditions in which the human being was described not only as a physical body. In different systems, ideas arose about subtle bodies, levels, sheaths, energy centers, hidden layers of inner life. These descriptions cannot automatically be accepted as scientific anatomy. They belong to another language: symbolic, practical, spiritual, cultural.

But they too carry a strong image: the human being is not exhausted by the visible body.

It is here that the central authorial analogy appears:

if modern theoretical thought allows an image of the hidden dimensionality of reality,

and esoteric tradition preserves an image of the hidden multilayeredness of the human being,

can one build an imagined model in which these two languages are compared?

Not identified with each other.

Not proving one another.

Not turning into a physical theory of the human being.

But compared as two forms of thought about invisible multilayeredness.

This is how the main bridge of this book appears:

seven additional dimensions as an image of the hidden dimensionality of the world

and

seven subtle bodies as an image of the hidden multilayeredness of the human being.

This connection is not a scientific statement.

It is the central authorial analogy.

A Careful Reminder from Quantum Physics

Here it is easy to take another step too quickly.

One may remember that quantum physics has long forced the human being to treat familiar images more carefully. Light and matter, under different experimental conditions, display wave and corpuscular properties. The wave properties of matter are not a recent conjecture: Louis de Broglie proposed this line of thought a hundred years ago, and the diffraction behavior of electrons was experimentally demonstrated as early as 1927.

For this book, what matters is not an imaginary mystical conclusion, but a more modest reminder: reality is not always obliged to fit into one convenient intuitive language.

Quantum duality does not prove the spiritual side of the world and does not turn the observer's consciousness into a physical mechanism. This boundary will be examined in more detail later. Here it is enough to hold the main point: the book's dual-aspect position is not derived from quantum physics. It remains an authorial assumption.

Why Seven

The number seven in this model can easily tempt us.

If one system speaks of seven additional dimensions, and another of seven subtle bodies, one wants too quickly to say: then they must be describing the same thing.

But this is precisely where pseudoscience begins.

A numerical coincidence does not prove the identity of entities. Structural similarity does not mean that we are looking at one and the same object. M-theory does not confirm subtle bodies. Subtle bodies are not physical dimensions. Esoteric tradition does not become physics because it can be beautifully compared with a modern mathematical image.

And yet the number seven can be used differently.

Not as proof.

But as an architectural bridge.

Within the authorial model, the seven subtle bodies will be considered not as proven sheaths of the human being, but as seven speculative levels of stabilization of experience. In other words, they will not be "things" hidden next to the body, but levels through which one can imaginatively describe different ways of organizing human life.

One level is closer to bodily stability.

Another - to emotions and desires.

A third - to thought, images and inner schemes.

A fourth - to connections, attachment, love, the pain of relationships.

A fifth - to expression, voice, meaning, the capacity to manifest oneself.

A sixth - to vision, intuition, inner orientation.

A seventh - to wholeness, task, the feeling of being included in something larger.

For now this is only a preliminary map. It cannot yet be accepted as a finished system. But it is already clear why it is needed: it allows us to speak of the human being not as a set of separate reactions, but as a multilayered process of stabilizing experience.

Thus the esoteric image begins to work inside the model.

Not as proven anatomy.

But as a structure of the question.

What Enters the Model

The Model of Multidimensional Reality holds the question of why the human being cannot be reduced to one level.

It includes an interest in the moment of entry into life.

It includes the image of lineage as a non-accidental foundation.

It includes the question of a personal program.

It includes the idea of subtle bodies as a map of the levels of the human being.

It includes the cosmic motif as an image of inclusion in a broader order.

But the status of these elements must be held clearly.

These elements enter the model not as established mechanisms, but as parts of a speculative architecture. Within it, one can compare the ancestral basis, the environment of entry, the personal program and the levels of experience in order to build a larger picture of the human trajectory.

This is not proof.

It is a way of thinking.

And the value of such a way is not that it closes the question once and for all.

It is that it gives language to questions that otherwise remain scattered.

Where Resistance Arises

Here the reader almost inevitably has an objection.

If this is not proven, why tell such a theory at all?

Why not leave only psychology, biology, social environment and personal responsibility? Why introduce the Model of Multidimensional Reality, subtle bodies, additional dimensions, monad, destiny, a cosmic image?

This objection is necessary.

Without it, the book really would risk becoming a beautiful system that connects everything with everything too easily.

The answer is not that ordinary explanations are "not enough" and therefore must be replaced by esotericism. No. Psychology, biology, social conditions, family history, the body, language, memory, culture - all of this remains important. The book does not cancel these levels.

But it asks another question:

can one build an authorial model that holds them together and adds to them a careful language of individual task?

Can one speak of destiny not as a sentence, but as an image of trajectory?

Of karma - not as punishment, but as a recurring task?

Of the soul or monad - not as a proven immortal entity, but as an image of an individual program?

Of subtle bodies - not as physical anatomy, but as seven levels of stabilization of experience?

Of M-theory - not as confirmation of esotericism, but as an image of hidden dimensionality that helps imagine multilayeredness?

Such a reading does not require belief from the reader.

It requires only a temporary agreement to enter the model and see what it allows one to notice.

The Main Boundary of the Chapter

Now the main point can be formulated.

The Model of Multidimensional Reality is a broad authorial hypothesis.

It proposes imagining that the human being appears at the intersection of lineage, environment, body, consciousness, symbolic levels, cosmic order and personal task.

Its main risk is that it may sound like a physical-biological statement.

Its force may lie elsewhere: it becomes an authorial speculative architecture.

In this architecture, M-theory does not prove subtle bodies, and the coincidence in the number of levels does not become a physical identity. The monad and planetary imprint also remain elements of the authorial model, not established mechanisms.

All these elements can be used as the language of a larger model if the book honestly shows their status.

This is where the real work begins.

Because a bold hypothesis by itself guarantees nothing. It may become a living architecture of meaning. Or it may become pseudoscience if it begins to present itself as knowledge.

That is why the next chapter is needed not in order to add one more layer.

It is needed for the rules.

If we are going to unfold an authorial hypothesis, we must first understand how to do this honestly.



The Rules of Honest Speculation

A Table Holding Too Much

Imagine a table covered with sheets of notes.

On one sheet is written: genome.

On another: the moment of conception.

Nearby lie the words: M-theory, additional dimensions, subtle bodies, chakras, monad, karma, consciousness, fate, patterns, memory, attention, meaning.

If you look at these sheets from a distance, a powerful feeling may arise: everything is connected.

The numbers echo one another. The images answer one another. One language seems to continue another. A scientific word gives weight to an esoteric image. An esoteric image gives depth to a scientific word. Little by little, threads stretch between separate notes, and a pattern appears on the table.

In such a moment, it is easy to feel inspired.

And almost as easy to be mistaken.

Because the coherence of a pattern does not yet mean that the structure of the world has been found.

A beautiful correspondence can be fruitful. It can open a question, give thought a new direction, illuminate what had previously remained scattered. But it can also deceive, if we stop noticing the distance between an image and proof.

The previous chapter introduced the Model of Multidimensional Reality as a large authorial hypothesis. It brought into relation the hidden dimensionality of the physical picture of the world and the esoteric map of the multilevel human being. It introduced a dual-aspect view: the world is considered material and spiritual at the same time.

Now we need to take a step that seems less vivid, but on which the whole book depends.

We need to agree on rules.

Not in order to stop imagination.

But so that imagination does not replace knowledge.

Why a Bold Hypothesis Needs Boundaries

A person rarely goes wrong only because they have asked too large a question.

More often, the error begins later.

First an intuition appears. Then a beautiful image is found. Then several scientific terms attach themselves to it. After that comes the temptation to speak with more certainty than the grounds allow.

In this way, a hypothesis quietly changes its voice.

It began with the words:

"Can we imagine?"

And ends with the words:

"This is how it is."

Sometimes there is only one paragraph between these two phrases.

For example, one may say: in some physical theories, additional dimensions are considered. This is a correct thought, if the status of the theory is carefully marked.

One may say: in esoteric traditions, there are ideas of subtle bodies. This is also correct, if a traditional image is not presented as established anatomy.

One may bring two motifs together and ask: could one language help us imagine another? This is an acceptable philosophical analogy.

But one cannot, without additional proof, move to the phrase: additional dimensions are subtle bodies.

It is in this short transition that an image turns into pseudoscience.

A bold hypothesis needs boundaries not because boldness is dangerous in itself.

Boundaries are needed because the human mind loves completeness. It is pleased when separate elements gather into a whole. It feels an almost physical relief when a complex world becomes intelligible.

But inner relief is not a criterion of truth.

A system may be elegant and mistaken.

A model may be beautiful and unproven.

A metaphysical position may be profound and still remain a position, not a fact.

Therefore the first discipline of this book is simple:

do not hide the status of a thought.

What Science Can Do and What It Does Not Promise

In speaking about the spiritual aspect of the world, it is easy to place science in an awkward position.

People begin to demand from it an answer to a question formulated in such a way that it cannot be tested. Then the impossibility of an answer is used as an argument in whichever direction is convenient.

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