Published June 3, 2026 | Version v1
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Circular Dependency Across Gravity, Time, Information, and Observability: A Synthesis of Structure-First Results

Description

This paper synthesizes results obtained across multiple independent investigations within a structure-first research program, including studies of persistence, accessibility routing, gravitational organization, observability, information, temporal reconstruction, and cloaking.

Although these investigations were developed to address distinct physical questions, each repeatedly converged upon the same organizational pattern. Persistence depends upon accessibility; accessibility governs routing; routing contributes to gravitational organization; observation requires distinguishability and reconstruction; information depends upon resolvable phase relationships; and temporal ordering emerges through registration of distinguishable states.

The paper argues that these recurring relationships form a closed dependency architecture linking gravity, time, information, observability, accessibility, routing, and persistence. The resulting structure is interpreted as circular dependency rather than circular reasoning, where observer-level quantities derive operational significance through mutually supporting relationships rather than through isolation as independent primitives.

Rather than proposing a new force, field, or dynamical law, the work documents the repeated emergence of the same dependency network across multiple completed research programs. The central result is the convergence itself, suggesting that observer-level reality may be characterized more effectively by organizational relationships and dependency structures than by hierarchies built from isolated foundational quantities.

The paper serves as a synthesis and integration document connecting prior work on persistence, accessibility, gravitation, temporal reconstruction, observability, and information within a unified organizational framework.

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Circular Dependency Across Gravity, Time, Information, and Observability_ A Synthesis of Structure-First Results.pdf