It From An Information-First Framework and the Purpose of Consciousness
By Ryan Kralik
For centuries, science has searched for the fundamental “stuff” of the universe — atoms, particles, forces, spacetime. But what if none of those are the true foundation? What if reality is built from something deeper?
It From Us makes a bold but scientifically grounded the universe is made of information — and consciousness is part of how that information is shaped.
In this book, Ryan Kralik brings together twenty years of research across physics, biology, psychology, anthropology, and the study of human anomalies to show that the same patterns appear systems survive when they maintain coherence, and coherence is ultimately informational, not material.
Instead of treating physics, life, culture, and consciousness as separate mysteries, It From Us shows how they all point to a single underlying
Quantum physics shows that reality doesn’t “settle” until information is selected.Thermodynamics ties order and disorder directly to information and entropy.Biology stores its instructions not in matter but in digital-style code.Culture — religion, myth, law, memory — behaves like a long-term information storage system.Near-death experiences and psi research show consistent informational anomalies that don’t fit a purely material world. Across twelve chapters and nine detailed appendices, this book explores how modern science — Shannon’s information theory, black hole physics, quantum non-locality, Integrated Information Theory, epigenetics, cognitive evolution, and cultural memory — all converge on the same information comes first. Matter is what information looks like when it persists. Consciousness is the interface that selects and stabilizes it.
Rather than arguing that “mind creates reality” or that matter is an illusion, It From Us offers a middle path grounded in actual scientific findings. Information is the underlying layer; matter and mind are its expressions. This helps make sense of the hardest problems in
Why quantum events behave probabilisticallyWhy consciousness cannot be reduced to neurons aloneWhy evolution produces meaning-seeking organismsWhy cultures across the world converge on similar ethical rulesWhy certain anomalies — from remote viewing data to NDEs — refuse to disappear The book also explains why this idea could not have been discovered earlier. Before the 20th century, there was no concept of information as a measurable physical quantity. Only with the rise of computing, quantum theory, systems science, and cultural memory research has it become possible to see the deeper pattern.
Clear, direct, and written for thoughtful general readers, It From Us connects dots across physics, consciousness studies, anthropology, and the deep history of civilization. It does not preach, and it does not require belief. It simply offers a new way of understanding the universe — one that makes sense of the data we already have but haven’t yet placed into one picture.
For readers interested in big-idea nonfiction, the nature of reality, consciousness, meaning, ancient culture, quantum physics, NDEs, psi research, or the long arc of human civilization