Abstract:
This paper introduces a theory of structural isomorphism between the core ontological, ethical, and eschatological tenets of the Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) and a geometrodynamic model of reality termed The Reality Framework (TRF). We posit that reality is best described as a dynamic, 11-dimensional information manifold emerging from a singular Universal Substrate. Within this framework, theological concepts find direct geometric analogues: Divine Unity (Tawhid) as the Substrate, the created universe as the Manifold, the righteous path (Sırat-ı Müstakim) as a geodesic, Divine Law (Torah/Sharia) as the manifold’s metric tensor, and sin as agent-induced negative curvature. We argue that the distinct soteriological focuses of Judaism (orthopraxy), Christianity (Incarnation), and Islam (submission) can be modeled as complementary projections—a focus on the metric, a topological transformation, and dynamic alignment, respectively—of this single underlying reality. Drawing on John Archibald Wheeler’s geometrodynamics and the cognitive science of religion, this model is presented as a form of “Integration” in Ian Barbour’s typology, offering a coherent, non-reductive language for unifying scientific and theological worldviews. Finally, we explore the theory’s implications for the “value alignment problem” in artificial intelligence ethics, proposing that theological systems can be understood as time-tested algorithms for ethical navigation within a complex information space
Yıldırım, E. (2025). Geometrodynamics of the Soul: A Theory of Structural Isomorphism in Abrahamic Theology and Physics. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17058422
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