Morality

I – Morality is an emergent property of existence, arising from the structural tendencies of reality toward the generation, preservation, and refinement of information.

II – Because morality emerges from the same foundational constraints that govern mathematics, physics, and life, it must be considered alongside other first principles and brute facts.

III – Moral norms are not arbitrary preferences but functional consequences of the universe’s information dynamics and therefore possess objective structure even when subjectively interpreted.

IV – The moral value of any action, system, or behavior is determined by its alignment with the conditions that support life, consciousness, and the refinement of information.

V – Moral understanding deepens as scientific, philosophical, and experiential knowledge improves, and therefore moral insight is subject to refinement rather than dogma.