This two-part manuscript of 50 pages develops a unified "structural field" account of how complex systems form, persist, destabilize, and reorganize.
Book I introduces the Nullist-Populist continuum: a phase portrait in which coherence emerges from a balance between directed expansion and structural void. The central quantity is a coherence density field ΦΦ and a normalized structural index Σ∈ -1,1]Σ∈ -1,1] that locates a system between fragmentation (Nullist) and condensation into dominant structure (Populist), with a critical surface marking equilibrium. Curvature (or effective geometry) is treated as emergent from this imbalance, and the "Hrishi Field Equation" links local curvature response to global surplus/deficit. The framework is then mapped across four domains-Origin of Species, Continuum Hypothesis, Operating Systems, and Cultural Heritage-arguing they share a common bifurcation logic. Book I also provides interpretive prose and visualization, plus a qualitative WSLFA (Wandering-Staying-Loitering-Focused-Astray) grammar for reading trajectories through coherence/dispersion regimes. Two further technical essays develop (i) "categorical hooks" as boundary-return mechanisms that convert expansive dynamics into recurrence, and (ii) a discrete reinterpretation of symbolic "division" (preimages, long-run averages, and threshold-triggered resets) to formalize annihilation, invariance, flattening, and forced recurrence.
Book II proposes a cross-domain transition template (A→B→C→D): distributed potential, constraint coupling, critical threshold, and dissipative re-equilibration into a new attractor. It emphasizes coordination strain and interaction density as the drivers of nonlinear change, supplies diagnostic markers of approaching criticality, and offers a dual "inverse" phenomenology (B→C) describing breakdown from inside the transition-loss of redundancy, rising instability, and the disappearance of recoverability-using mirrored equations and plots to show that external "transformation" is internally experienced as collapse and narrowing futures.
Related Subjects
Philosophy