UNRELATIVITY

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Unrelativity is not a philosophy to be learned — it is a way of seeing to be recovered.

Beneath every experience, beneath all comparison, judgment, and story, something simply is. Not a concept. Not a conclusion arrived at by argument. The sheer act of being itself — prior to all division, prior to the separation of self from world.

This site offers a language for that ground, and a compass for finding it within the texture of ordinary life.


The Core Insight

Truth is the isness that remains when relativity falls away.

Relativity — the mind’s constant movement of comparison, contrast, and self-reference — is not wrong. It is the texture of creaturely existence. But it is not the deepest layer of reality. Beneath it lies Oluluk: isness, pure Presence, the ground from which all manifestation arises and to which it returns.

The more the mind releases comparison, judgment, and story, the more pure Presence becomes visible. As relativity loosens, pure perception arises — what the Qur’an describes as seeing with clarity (basira).

Unrelativity does not mean the abolition of the relative. It means perceiving the relative from the side of its ground — seeing the world without being imprisoned inside its comparisons.


What This Site Offers

This site is both a lexicon and a compass:

  • A language for the ground beneath ordinary experience
  • A living lexicon of key metaphysical terms
  • Essays drawn from KendiBiz, Kavuşturan Pusula, and the forthcoming Tekrarlayan İleti
  • A compass model for ethical clarity and inner freedom
  • Reflections on values, belonging, love, service, and sacred presence

Everything here serves one orientation: to see life from the side of Truth, not from the side of the ego’s comparisons.


The Architecture of the Framework

The Unrelativity framework rests on a precise ontological structure. These terms are not decorative — each points to something that can be directly perceived:

Olu — Is. The unrelative ground of all be-ing. Not a being among beings, not even the highest being, but the pure selfhood that has no other to be relative to. Free of duality. The isness that simply is. Göresiz Kendlik — unrelative selfhood.

Oluluk — Is-ness. The nature of pure Presence. The causeless cause from which manifestation arises — not from necessity or external decision, but as the natural expression of what Olu is.

Olunum — Be-ing. The movement between the unrelative ground and the world of manifestation. Be-ing has two modes: the incorporeal, tending toward the unrelative; and the concrete, tending toward the world. At the pivot between them stands OL! — the creative act, equivalent to the Quranic Kun (كن): not a command from outside but the inner voice of Oluluk itself.

Kendilik — Selfhood. Not the psychological ego, but the self that knows itself as grounded in the unrelative. The self that sees its own seeing.

Göresizlik — Unrelativity. Perception freed from dualistic filters. Not the negation of the relative, but vision from the side of its ground. Literally: seeing without a “relative-to.”

Aidiyet — Belongingness. Where the heart actually lives and serves. The orientation that underlies all our choices, whether we are aware of it or not.

These are not decorative words. They are precision tools for describing the shift from self-centered interpretation to Self-centered clarity.


🧭 The Compass (Kavuşturan Pusula)

Alongside the conceptual language, Unrelativity offers a practical framework: the Compass developed in Kavuşturan Pusula.

The Compass is a tool for honest self-reading. It asks:

  • Where are you, inwardly, right now?
  • What is actually driving this choice — need, fear, value, or presence?
  • In whose direction is your heart oriented?

Read correctly, the Compass reveals a chain: Your value orientation → your hidden motivations → your spiritual direction.

It is not a theory about people — it is a mirror for your own heart, decisions, and belonging.


How to Begin

Read Core Concepts. Let the key terms become familiar not as definitions to memorize, but as pointers — each one indicating something that can, with attention, be directly perceived.

Explore Essays by Theme. Unrelativity and perception — Selfhood and belonging — Love, service, and sacred presence.

Try a Compass Reflection. Take one situation in your life and ask: What value is driving me here? What am I afraid to lose? Whom am I actually serving?

Follow the ongoing series as they appear: Notes Toward Tekrarlayan Teosofi — Compass Letters — Unrelativity Reflections


A Doorway, Not a Closed System

This site is not a closed system of ideas. It is a doorway.

Take your time. Return to concepts as they deepen. Let the language adjust how you see, rather than trying to fit it into old categories.

The work grows deeper as you do.