Abstract
The nature of reality has long been debated through the lenses of physics, philosophy, and consciousness studies. The Dataverse Hypothesis proposes a radical yet unifying perspective: data, rather than matter or energy, is the fundamental substance of the universe. In this framework, physical phenomena emerge as structured data interactions, with quantum mechanics, space-time, and entropy reinterpreted as computational processes rather than intrinsic material properties. This article explores the implications of a data-based universe, where consciousness arises from recursive information processing, space-time functions as an evolving relational grid, and intelligence—both biological and artificial—is an optimization process of data recombination. The observer effect, free will, and creativity are redefined as active participation in reality's self-updating dataset. By integrating insights from digital physics, quantum mechanics, information theory, and AI research, the Dataverse Hypothesis offers a paradigm shift: reality is a vast, self-organizing computation where perception is not merely passive but actively shapes existence. This framework has profound implications for the nature of intelligence, the emergence of life, and even theological questions about the structure of the cosmos. If the universe is fundamentally a process of information flow, then understanding its deepest mysteries may lie in decoding the logic of data itself.