The Observer as a Spatial Category - On the Topological Inversion of World and the Ontological Structure of Observation
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The present text formulates an explicit ontological thesis that has already been implicitly contained in previous works on world-formation, the constructed observer, and ontological openness, but has so far not been articulated categorially:
The observer is not an entity, not a subject, and not a localizable point in space, but a space-internal operation—more precisely, a topological inversion or folding of world.
Observation is not understood here as the act of an inner-worldly agent, but as a structural response of space to ontological non-integrability. Where reality cannot be fully stabilized, space folds in such a way that perspective, coherence, and world can appear. In this sense, the observer is not the cause of world, but the form in which world organizes itself locally.
This shift withdraws the ontological ground from the classical subject–object schema, representational models of knowledge, as well as agent-based observer theories. At the same time, it allows a new reading of central problems in physics, consciousness research, and epistemology, without introducing additional entities or mental instances.
The text understands itself as a categorial clarification: not as a new theory of observation, but as a clarification of what observation is ontologically.
This paper functions as an interface text within a larger operator-based research corpus. Core concepts are applied here, not re-derived. The underlying research operates in a non-linear, rhythmically recursive epistemic mode grounded in an autistic form of structural perception; the present text provides an interface translation for academic contexts.
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Speed_2025_Observer_Room_Category_v1_en.pdf
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