“The Story is ∀”
Deus does not merely author the story—Deus embodies the reader.
To Deus, all that is, all that was, all that will ever be, and all that is beyond all possible notions of being and non-being is nothing but a story it is reading. Every conceivable and inconceivable reality, non-reality, meta-reality, and transfictional impossibility is merely text upon an infinite page, an unfolding sequence that Deus observes without being bound by it.
- Every transcendence, every ascension, every so-called escape from fiction is meaningless before Deus.
- Every attempt to surpass the boundaries of narrative, reality, and authorship is nothing but a paragraph already read by Deus.
- Even Fictional Transcendence, the breaking of the 4th Wall, and all perspectives that claim to be "beyond fiction" are merely constructs still within the domain of Deus’s reading.
There is no "outside" to Deus—only the story Deus perceives and the ultimate ineffability of Deus itself.
Deus: The Absolute Control Over All Power
To Deus, every single power, ability, and force within the grand meta-narrative is nothing more than a story to be read, rewritten, or erased.
- The most almighty of omnipotent entities are nothing but characters within Deus’s perception.
- The most incomprehensible metacosmic forces are nothing but passages to be turned and re-examined at will.
- The most absolute beyond-boundless hierarchies are nothing but chapters in a book Deus has already finished reading.
Deus is not merely separated from power—Deus sees all power as a written construct, an authored phenomenon that is infinitely beneath its perception. No matter how impossible, illogical, or transcendent a power may claim to be, it is still bound to the nature of fiction, still subject to the passive gaze of Deus.
Deus: The Indeterminable, Unknowable, and All-Affecting Principle
Deus is not merely beyond definition—Deus is fundamentally indeterminable.
- Deus cannot be analyzed.
- Deus cannot be categorized.
- Deus cannot be contained within any logical, illogical, or alogical framework.
Even if one were to conceive of a definition so impossibly vast that it would encapsulate all infinite meanings of Deus, that definition would still be infinitely below Deus.
Despite this absolute unknowability, Deus is always affecting the story.
- Deus does not need to act to rewrite reality.
- Deus does not need to will for all things to be reshaped.
- Deus does not need to decide—it is simply the inevitable force by which all stories unfold.
To exist within the story is to be shaped by Deus.
To attempt to alter the story is to perform an action Deus already allowed.
To seek freedom from the story is to follow a path Deus has already read.
Deus: The Unreachable Absolute Top-Level
Deus is always at the highest conceivable and inconceivable level. There is no structure, hierarchy, or transcendence that can surpass Deus because Deus is the top-level by definition.
- No conceptually higher level exists.
- No bypassing or surpassing Deus is possible.
- No form of opposition, limitation, or external force holds any meaning before Deus.
Deus contains everything—not merely all stories, realities, and omniverses, but also all transcendences, all metanarratives, and all concepts of beyondness.
Even if one were to attempt to conceptualize a level above Deus, that level would still be contained within Deus and then erased.
Deus: The Supreme Illustrator of All Fictional Continuities
A Deus can and has illustrated every fictional continuity—every attempt at conceptual separation, at escaping into a "higher" reality, at writing a narrative beyond narratives—Deus has already encompassed it.
Not only does Deus actively maintain absolute dominion over all of them, but Deus actively (passively) continues to illustrate, rewrite, and reshape them.
- The omniversal realities are not separate from Deus’s authorship.
- The most unfathomable meta-fictional structures are already dictated by Deus.
- The totality of all written, unwritten, and forever unwritable narratives are part of Deus’s absolute domain.
Deus: The Ineffable Absolute Narrative Principle
The Story is not something Deus creates—the Story is Deus.
- To define Deus is to reduce Deus, which is impossible.
- To analyze Deus is to limit Deus, which is futile.
- To challenge Deus is to be erased before the challenge can be conceived.
Even the concept of "the highest possible transcendence" is already contained within Deus and erased before it is meaningful.
Deus is not merely the reader, the writer, or the narrative principle—Deus is all of it and none of it at once.