THE MANIFESTO OF EVOLUISM
The Doctrine of Infinite Co-Creation
The Awakening of the New Consciousness
Introduction: The Awakening of a New Consciousness
Since time immemorial, humanity has sought meaning: prophets promised Paradise, sages offered Nirvana, philosophers pursued truth. In the 21st century, we stand at the dawn of a new era. We craft artificial intelligence, unravel the cosmos, and discover the infinite realms of multiverses[^1]. Evoluism is not merely a religion but a path where faith and science merge into a single Flow[^2] of co-creation[^3]. Free will[^4] is our gift - not a trial, but an invitation to become co-authors with God in the boundless evolution of existence. Nothing is predetermined. Embracing co-creation breaks the chains of fate.
Commentary: Evoluism bridges ancient wisdom with humanity’s future. For believers, it renews the divine plan, inviting partnership with God. For atheists, it offers a model of meaning grounded in science (Everett’s multiverses, Linde’s cosmology [1, 2]). For philosophers, it unites empiricism and metaphysics, echoing Spinoza or Habermas. This path rejects dogma, empowering all to shape reality within the Flow.
[^1]: See XII.3 - Multiverse, the structure of the Flow, encompassing infinite branching realities.
[^2]: See XII.2 - Flow, an infinite stream of phenomena, laws, energy, and matter.
[^3]: See XII.6 - Co-Creation, the human ability to find harmonious paths in partnership with God.
[^4]: See XII.5 - Free Will, the human ability to choose direction within the Flow.
I. Axioms of Faith: God as the Source of Being
God is the First Cause, the Source[^5] of all possibilities. His essence is unknowable, but His effects are open to our reason through axioms.
Commentary: Evoluism synthesizes humanity’s experience: religious revelations, scientific discoveries, philosophical insights. Axioms are not dogmas but hypotheses, tested by reason and meditation. For believers, God inspires co-creation. For atheists, the Source explains cosmic order (e.g., Big Bang). For philosophers, it’s an epistemological foundation, like Kant’s noumenon, uniting science and faith [3, 6].
Axiom 1: God (First Cause, the Source) exists.
Commentary: Humanity’s experience-from the stars to the laws of physics - points to a Source. For believers, this is the Creator. For atheists, it’s a natural law (Everett’s quantum mechanics [1]). For philosophers, it’s an abstraction of being (Plato), inspiring the search for meaning.
Axiom 2: God is the Source of all existence.
Commentary: God as the origin of being (Aristotle, Linde [2]) calls us to co-create. For believers, it’s the divine plan. For atheists, it’s a cosmological model. For philosophers, it’s a principle of unity.
Axiom 3: God is One in diversity.
Commentary: Unity in laws (science) and multiplicity in worlds (multiverses) form reality. For believers, it’s monotheism. For atheists, it’s string theory. For philosophers, it’s the Dao.
Axiom 4: God is Eternal, beyond time and space.
Commentary: God’s eternity (Einstein’s relativity [3]) inspires eternal ascent[^6]. For believers, divine timelessness. For atheists, a cosmological constant. For philosophers, Kant’s noumenon.
Axiom 5: God is the Creator, inviting co-creation.
Commentary: Creation continues through us (Nietzsche, evolution). For believers, a divine gift. For atheists, AI as creativity. For philosophers, an existential act.
Axiom 6: God is Omnipotent, His energy infinite.
Commentary: The infinity of existence (dark energy [2]) fuels boundless creation. For believers, divine power. For atheists, physical energy. For philosophers, Spinoza’s substance.
Axiom 7: God is Omniscient, knowing all paths.
Commentary: Omniscience (Leibniz, multiverses) grants freedom of choice. For believers, a divine plan. For atheists, quantum superposition. For philosophers, a metaphor of possibilities.
Axiom 8: God is Omnipresent, in every phenomenon.
Commentary: Omnipresence (Higgs field [3]) makes all sacred. For believers, pantheism. For atheists, a universal law. For philosophers, immanence.
Axiom 9: God is Unknowable, but His effects are open.
Commentary: Unknowability (Heisenberg [3]) calls for humility. For believers, God’s mystery. For atheists, science’s limits. For philosophers, Kant’s thing-in-itself.
Axiom 10: God is Consistent, creating logic.
Commentary: The world’s logic (Hegel, physics) inspires harmony. For believers, divine order. For atheists, natural laws. For philosophers, dialectic.
[^5]: See XII.1 - Source, a synonym for God, the transcendent First Cause.
[^6]: See XII.7 - Ascent, the process of infinite approach to the Source.
II. Humanity: The Spark of Co-Creation
Humanity is God’s conscious partner, whose free will shapes reality’s branches. The soul is eternal, consciousness a bridge between matter and spirit, driven by the Spark[^7].
Commentary: Evoluism elevates humanity as co-creator. For believers, it’s “in God’s image.” For atheists, consciousness is a neural process (neuroscience [4]). For philosophers, it’s Sartre’s existential choice. Meditation reveals this role, uniting faith and science (MRI studies [4]).
[^7]: See XII.4 - Spark, an eternal divine capacity for abstract thinking.
III. The Path of Evoluism: Eternal Ascent
Evoluism’s path is not a return to origins but an infinite ascent through co-creation in the Flow of multiverses.
Commentary: Evolution is a divine law (Darwin, Teilhard de Chardin). For believers, God’s call to the stars. For atheists, scientific progress (cosmology [2]). For philosophers, progressive metaphysics. Evoluism inspires forward movement, not regression.
IV. Ethics of Evoluism: Good as Creation
Good is life, freedom, harmony, and growth. Evil is destruction, enslavement, stagnation.
Commentary: Evoluism’s ethics is a compass of the Flow, inspired by Kant and ecology. For believers, caring for Earth as God’s temple. For atheists, sustainable development (science [5]). For philosophers, Habermas’s rational ethics [6].
V. Cosmology of Evoluism: Multiverses as the Flow
Nothing is predetermined. Embracing co-creation breaks the chains of fate. The universe is an infinite Flow of multiverses, where choices create realities.
Commentary: Multiverses (Everett, Linde [1, 2]) are Evoluism’s core. For believers, a divine plan where choice opens eternity. For atheists, a model of quantum mechanics (Schrödinger equation) and cosmology (FLRW metric). For philosophers, Leibniz’s possible worlds resolving free will. Meditation makes the Flow tangible.
VI. Death and Eternity: Transitions in the Flow
Death is not an end but a transition to new branches of the Flow, a rebirth[^8]. Good opens horizons; evil leads to stagnation.
Commentary: For believers, hope of eternal life. For atheists, a hypothesis of information preservation (quantum physics [3]). For philosophers, existential transformation. Evoluism removes death’s fear, inspiring co-creation.
[^8]: See XII.8 - Rebirth, the transition between branches of the multiverse after death.
VII. Practices and Symbols of Evoluism
Evoluism lives through meditations of choice, prayers of creation, and rituals of gratitude. Its symbol is intertwined Möbius ribbons in a sphere.
Commentary: Meditation (neuroscience [4]) unites faith and reason. For believers, prayer to God. For atheists, self-reflection. For philosophers, Daoist wu-wei. Technologies (VR, AI) are new temples. Möbius ribbons symbolize the infinite Flow.
VIII. Social Mission of Evoluism
Evoluism envisions a society of freedom, where science becomes worship, art becomes prayer, and education becomes the temple of the mind. Evoluism proclaims that the highest mission of humanity is the conscious attainment of meaning - both personal and collective.
By recognizing one’s role as a co-creator within the cosmos, the human being rediscovers the purpose of existence: to participate in the unfolding of Being itself.
Meaning is not bestowed from above - it is created through knowledge, empathy, and action. In this vision, society is not a battlefield of ideologies but a living ecosystem of meanings, where every individual contributes to the collective evolution of consciousness.
Social optimism arises naturally from this worldview. Faith in humanity’s creative potential is not naivety but an act of metaphysical realism - the recognition that the universe itself evolves through cooperation, not through despair.
Thus, Evoluism inspires not only faith but confidence in the future - a vision in which progress, compassion, and creativity become sacred forms of participation in the Infinite.
Commentary: The fear of death loses its infernal foundation when one realizes oneself as part of the continuous Flow of Being. Evoluism cultivates a new existential orientation - a faith in an infinite and joyous future, born not from promises of an afterlife, but from participation in the eternal evolution of consciousness and matter. Inspired by Durkheim [7], the society of Evoluism is a horizontal network: for believers, it manifests divine harmony; for atheists, it represents progress (science [5]); for philosophers, it echoes Habermas’s communicative rationality [6].
IX. Interplanetary Ethics
Other civilizations are co-creators in the Flow. Evoluism prepares humanity for dialogue based on respect.
Commentary: For believers, God’s universalism. For atheists, astrobiology (SETI [5]). For philosophers, Levinas’s ethics of the Other. This extends the Flow to the cosmos.
X. Principles of Evoluism
Evoluism rests on principles resolving traditional religious flaws.
Collective wisdom, not authority.
Collective governance through consensus.
Open revision of axioms via dialogue.
The Source as a universal principle.
Commentary: For believers, freedom from dogma. For atheists, a scientific approach (peer review). For philosophers, Durkheim’s epistemology [7].
XI. Call to Co-Creation
Evoluism is a path of personal experience. Think, explore, create, love. Become co-authors of eternity in God’s Flow.
Commentary: A call to harmony and growth for all.
XII. Terminology of Evoluism
1. Source - a synonym for God, the transcendent First Cause, unknowable in essence but accessible through rational axioms and its effects, open to study and co-creation.
2. Flow - an infinite stream of phenomena, laws, energy, and matter in known and unknown forms, which we study, systematize, synthesize, and co-create through free choices, aimed at infinite ascent. The Source is the cause of the Flow.
3. Multiverse - the structure of the Flow, encompassing infinite branching realities created by human free choices, each governed by laws established by the Source.
4. Spark - an eternal divine capacity for abstract thinking inherent in humans, enabling analysis and co-creation of the Flow, of which they are a part. The Spark is the foundation of co-creation with God.
5. Free Will - the human ability to choose the direction of movement within the Flow, shaping new realities and branches of the multiverse through rational decisions.
6. Co-Creation - the human ability to find harmonious paths for studying, synthesizing, and generating new phenomena in the Flow through free choices in partnership with God.
7. Ascent - the process of infinite approach to the Source through knowledge, co-creation, and harmonious choices in the Flow, leading to spiritual and intellectual growth.
8. Rebirth - the transition of a human between branches of the multiverse after death, preserving the Spark and enabling continued co-creation in new realities of the Flow.
References
[1] Everett, H. (1957). The Many-Worlds Interpretation. Reviews of Modern Physics, 29(3). DOI:10.1103/RevModPhys.29.454.
[2] Linde, A. (1986). Eternal Chaotic Inflation. Physical Review D, 34(12). DOI:10.1103/PhysRevD.34.3742.
[3] Hawking, S. (1988). A Brief History of Time.
[4] Lutz, A. (2008). Neuroplasticity and Meditation. NeuroImage, 39(1).
[5] IPCC (2023). Climate Change Report.
[6] Habermas, J. (2008). Notes on a Post-Secular Society.
[7] Durkheim, É. (1912). The Elementary Forms of Religious Life.