https://chatgpt.com/share/6a5387a0-ad58-83eb-b28d-c4cb087072ed
https://osf.io/yucvm/files/osfstorage/6a53876497a8be0d215b9278
The Complex Residual Principle
How Phase, Projection, Residual, Trace, and Emergent Time Reappear across Quantum Physics, Financial Markets, and Large Language Models
A Cross-Domain Framework for Understanding Why Quantum-Like Structure May Be Rare in Substance but Common in Grammar
Abstract
Quantum mechanics appears mysterious partly because many of its characteristic structures are normally encountered together only in microscopic physics: complex amplitudes, relative phase, interference, projection, measurement, unresolved alternatives, observer dependence, and unusual relations between phase and time. This paper asks whether some of those structures may belong to a more general organizational grammar that can also appear in macroscopic and engineered systems without making those systems literally quantum mechanical.
The investigation begins with the Capital Asset Pricing Model. CAPM already contains a projection geometry. It separates the component of an asset’s return associated with the market from the component not explained by that market direction. A minimal complex extension writes an asset state as:
Zᶠ = Rᶠ + iQᶠ = Aᶠ exp(iθᶠ). (0.1)
Here Rᶠ is the component admitted by a declared financial projection, while Qᶠ represents structure that remains orthogonal, unresolved, unpriced, or retained as financial pressure. Qᶠ may include liquidity, credit, option, funding, positioning, tail, or model pressure. The imaginary coordinate does not mean that this pressure is fictional. It means that it is dynamically relevant without being fully represented in the currently admitted real-axis valuation.
When many assets are placed in a common phase representation, their collective state may be written:
Cₘ = [Σᵢ wᵢ exp(iθᵢ)] / Σᵢ wᵢ = ρₘ exp(iΦₘ). (0.2)
The magnitude ρₘ measures market-wide phase coherence, while Φₘ gives the dominant collective orientation. The factor exp(iΦₘ) behaves like a clock hand. Because circular phase alone forgets completed revolutions, accumulated chronology requires an unwrapped phase Φ̃ₘ.
A second step introduces a market admission gate Gₘ. Phase movement that passes the gate becomes consequential market history; phase movement that does not pass remains as unresolved selection depth:
dτₘ = Gₘ|dΦ̃ₘ| / Ωₘ. (0.3)
dTₘ = (1 − Gₘ)|dΦ̃ₘ| / Ωₘ. (0.4)
dζₘ = dτₘ + i dTₘ. (0.5)
The coordinate τₘ represents ledgered market time, while Tₘ represents imaginary-time-like residual depth. This construction resembles the Semantic Meme Field Theory distinction between realized collapse ticks and unresolved phase rotation. In the relevant SMFT formulation, an observer projection writes a trace when collapse succeeds; when collapse is deferred, phase evolution continues without producing a new semantic tick, and the unresolved phase history accumulates along an imaginary-time axis.
The same architecture can be translated into large language model engineering. An LLM state may be represented schematically as:
Zᴸ = Rᴸ + i𝐐ᴸ. (0.6)
Rᴸ is the emitted, accepted, cited, or actioned answer. The residual vector 𝐐ᴸ carries unresolved factual uncertainty, retrieval conflict, instruction tension, tool unreliability, ambiguity, rejected alternatives, and memory inconsistency. Under this interpretation, hallucination is not merely an incorrect token. It is a gate failure in which unresolved residual is misclassified as admitted fact.
The paper proposes the Complex Residual Principle:
Whenever a bounded observer projects a larger possibility field into an admitted result, dynamically active structure remains outside that projection. If the system preserves this remainder as residual, organizes alternatives by relative phase, gates consequential commitments, records accepted outcomes as trace, and allows trace to influence later projection, then quantum-like and time-like structures may emerge at the level of operational grammar.
The proposal is one of functional homology, not material identity. A market is not a quantum field, an asset is not a particle, and an LLM is not a quantum computer. The Gauge Grammar of Self-Organization states the required methodological restriction clearly: quantum and gauge concepts may be transferred as disciplined functional roles under declared protocols, but not as literal claims that higher-level systems share the same physical substance.
The broader hypothesis is that some characteristics regarded as mysterious in fundamental physics may become more intuitive when reconstructed inside a measurable macroscopic market and then deliberately engineered within an artificial observer. Physics may represent the deepest known physical realization of this grammar; finance may provide a visible macroscopic bridge; and LLMs may provide the most programmable experimental testbed.
Keywords
Complex residual; CAPM; quantum-like structure; phase coherence; projection; observer; financial geometry; imaginary time; emergent time; market time; large language models; residual governance; hallucination; Semantic Meme Field Theory; self-organization; trace; ledger.






























