A Minimal Structural Model of Recursive Coherence Feedback, Constraint, and Transformation Across Scales
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Description
Across domains concerned with change, persistence, and organization, similar structural patterns recur: polarity, constraint, circulation, breakdown, and reorganization. These patterns are frequently described through symbolic or domain-specific frameworks, which can obscure the minimal structural conditions that allow coherence to be maintained under transformation.
This paper proposes a minimal structural model of recursive coherence that identifies the irreducible conditions observed in systems that persist and reorganize across time. The model consists of two singularities held in continuous feedback, a bounded relational field, and a point of contact through which transformation occurs. The framework is explicitly non-ontological, non-causal, and scale-agnostic. It does not explain phenomena or posit universal laws; rather, it describes a structural configuration that appears sufficient for coherence across multiple domains.
The model builds on prior work in multidimensional psychological architecture, temporal sequencing, and dual-singularity regulation (Chu Nguyễn Đức Dũng, 2025a; 2025b; 2025c). Together, these works establish coherence as an emergent property of dynamic feedback rather than static structure.
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