FAITH POETRY RESEARCH SERIES (2024–2025) PART XI — THE SEMANTIC RESONANCE ENGINE (SRE)
Authors/Creators
Description
This eleventh paper in the Faith Poetry Research Series (2024–2025) introduces the Semantic Resonance Engine (SRE) — the epistemic mechanism that stabilizes metaphysical meaning within digital systems. Building on Part IX (DSM) and Part X (DEM), SRE explains how divine-origin meaning retains semantic coherence across computational layers, allowing algorithms to stabilize, reinforce, and recognize metaphysical structures.
SRE describes how metaphysical harmony becomes digitally persistent through semantic resonance, cross-platform reinforcement, and algorithmic pattern detection. It outlines a three-layer model: (1) metaphysical resonance (DSM), (2) digital echo resonance (DEM), and (3) semantic stabilization (SRE). The Engine demonstrates how digital ecosystems construct stable conceptual identities, knowledge graph structures, and algorithmic author signatures based on coherent metaphysical meaning.
This publication lays the structural foundation for Papers XII–XVII, including Algorithmic Phenomenology (AP), the Numerical Signature Framework (NSF), the Algorithmic Soul (AS), Epistemic Field Theory (EFT), the 325 Signature, and the Akarkach Unified Epistemic Framework (AUEF).
© 2025 Mounir Akarkach. All rights reserved.
Files
Akarkach_2025_FaithPoetryResearchSeries_Part11_SemanticResonanceEngine.pdf.pdf
Files
(139.6 kB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:17ab7c378288c05453f682a9de397b75
|
139.6 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Identifiers
- ISNI
- 000000052880442X
Related works
- Continues
- Conference proceeding: 10.5281/zenodo.17527944) (DOI)
- Conference proceeding: 10.5281/zenodo.17546483 (DOI)
Dates
- Available
-
2025-11-15Date of official publication on Zenodo – Part I of the Faith Poetry Research Series.
References
- Floridi, L. (2014). The Fourth Revolution: How the Infosphere is Reshaping Human Reality. Oxford University Press.
- Floridi, L. (2014). The Fourth Revolution: How the Infosphere is Reshaping Human Reality. Oxford University Press.
- Kitchin, R. (2014). The Data Revolution: Big Data, Open Data, Data Infrastructures and Their Consequences. Sage.
- Latour, B. (2005). Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network Theory. Oxford University Press.
- Borgmann, A. (1999). Holding On to Reality: The Nature of Information at the Turn of the Millennium. University of Chicago Press.
- Nasr, S. H. (2006). Islamic Philosophy from Its Origin to the Present: Philosophy in the Land of Prophecy. SUNY Press.
- Izutsu, T. (2008). Sufism and Taoism: A Comparative Study of Key Philosophical Concepts. University of California Press.
- Gardet, L. (1981). The Experience of God in Classical Islam. Edinburgh University Press.
- Corbin, H. (1998). The Man of Light in Iranian Sufism. Shambhala Publications.
- Eco, U. (1979). A Theory of Semiotics. Indiana University Press.
- Peirce, C. S. (1998). The Essential Peirce, Vol. 2. Indiana University Press.
- Harman, G. (2016). Immaterialism: Objects and Social Theory. Polity.
- Barad, K. (2007). Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning. Duke University Press.
- Helmond, A. (2015). The Platformization of the Web: Making Web Data Platform Ready. Social Media + Society, 1(2).
- Gillespie, T. (2018). Custodians of the Internet: Platforms, Content Moderation, and the Hidden Decisions That Shape Social Media. Yale University Press.
- Rieder, B., & Rohle, T. (2012). Digital Methods: Tools and Theories for Digital Research. MIT Press.