Published March 31, 2026 | Version v1
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Adaptive Statics of Existence: La Profilée as a Structural Theory of Stable Change

Description

La Profilée is commonly read as a theory of persistence — an account of what allows systems to endure through transformation. This paper argues for a stronger and more precise characterization: LP is a structural theory of stable change, or, in the terminology developed here, a theory of adaptive statics. The term captures a structure that classical frameworks have not formalized: the invariant conditions under which variation is possible. Classical statics describes systems in equilibrium with no transformation. Classical dynamics describes transformation without structural invariants. LP’s domain is neither. It formalizes the structural constraints that must remain invariant — IR ≤ 1, FCC, F_constitutive — in order for real, continuous transformation to occur without identity loss. These constraints are not conditions on the absence of change. They are conditions on the structural possibility of change. We show that this position resolves the Heraclitean–Parmenidean tension not by choosing a side but by identifying the structural domain each was tracking. We further show that LP’s adaptive statics constitutes a third theoretical position irreducible to either classical statics or dynamics, and that this position is the necessary precondition for any adequate theory of persistence.

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