Published April 1, 2026 | Version v1
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Quantum Mechanics as a Theory of Contextual Coherence: The Résonon and the Preparation of Reality

Authors/Creators

  • 1. Independent Researcher

Description

Quantum mechanics is often regarded as paradoxical or incomplete due to the imposition of a classical ontology that is not suited to its domain. This paper proposes a reinterpretation based on the notion of contextual coherence, in which the quantum state is not an intrinsic property but a relational configuration dependent on interaction conditions. Measurement is thus understood as a regime transition characterized by phase fixation and the dispersion of coherence into the environment.

Within this framework, the Résonon is introduced as a minimal conceptual unit articulating energy, information, and temporal phase. It does not constitute a new physical entity but serves as a theoretical tool to express the internal logic of coherence transitions. This approach allows for a reformulation of superposition, contextuality, and decoherence without invoking additional assumptions such as many worlds or hidden variables.

Finally, the paper opens an epistemological dialogue with operative knowledge systems such as Ifá, highlighting a convergence around the notion of preparing reality. Quantum mechanics thus emerges as a theory of coherence regimes in transition, where reality stabilizes through contextual configurations rather than as a set of pre-existing objects.

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Quantum Mechanics as a Theory of Contextual Coherence_Adonis Liranza Diaz.pdf

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Dates

Created
2026-04-01
Quantum mechanics as a Theory of Contextual Coherence