Field-Network Theory is a unified theory hypothesis proposing that reality emerges from relational field structures in which time, space, mass and consciousness arise from structural difference rather than existing as fundamental backgrounds.The theory proposes that physical reality is not composed of objects located in space, but of relations forming a continuous structural network. Time arises as ordered delay within this network, while space appears as stabilized relational structure. Matter represents bound temporal structure, and light corresponds to nearly unbound structural resonance.
Field-Network Theory connects concepts from fundamental physics, cosmology and consciousness studies into a single structural framework aimed at explaining how observable reality emerges from possibility itself.
The work develops an ontological model in which continuity, quantum phenomena, gravitation and conscious experience are interpreted as different regimes of the same underlying relational structure.