https://chatgpt.com/share/6a0b5f8b-1598-83eb-9e02-ac649db4f357
https://osf.io/hj8kd/files/osfstorage/6a0b67db2dc9aae87a478ce2
Residue and Event Horizon: A Boundary-Diagnostic Grammar for AI Reasoning Across Domains
How Residual Governance Becomes Operational When AI Learns Where Interpretation Must Stop and Trace-Based Reasoning Must Begin
Abstract
Modern AI does not merely need more answers. It needs a disciplined way to know where answers should stop.
As large language models become general-purpose analyzers, they are increasingly asked to interpret heterogeneous events across physics, finance, law, organizations, medicine, science, politics, and AI systems themselves. A bank run, a black hole, a legal hard case, an organizational collapse, a scientific anomaly, a medical diagnostic mystery, and an AI hallucination appear unrelated at the surface. Yet they often share a deeper structure: an interior process exceeds the current observer’s ability to disclose it directly; only compressed exterior traces remain visible; the unresolved remainder continues to bend future outcomes.
This article introduces a boundary-diagnostic grammar built around two concepts: Residue and Event Horizon.
Residue names what remains unclosed after a system projects, gates, interprets, models, or records reality. It is not mere noise, error, or ignorance. It is the structured remainder produced when a bounded observer’s current protocol cannot fully close the situation.
Event Horizon names the boundary at which direct interpretation fails. It is not the residue itself. It is the disclosure limit surrounding residue. Across domains, an event-horizon-like structure appears when an interior process cannot be reconstructed from exterior trace under the current protocol, yet that hidden interior continues to affect future behavior.
The central claim is:
(0.1) Residue names the unclosed remainder; Event Horizon locates the boundary where direct disclosure of that remainder fails.
Or more operationally:
(0.2) Residue_P = InteriorDynamics_P − Reconstruct_P(ExteriorTrace_P).
(0.3) Horizon_P ⇔ Reconstruct_P(ExteriorTrace_P) fails while InteriorDynamics_P still affects FuturePath_P.
This distinction matters especially for AI. Residue tells AI what must not be erased. Event Horizon tells AI where it must stop pretending it can see. Together, they provide a general reasoning backbone for analyzing opacity, uncertainty, hidden interiors, trace leakage, backreaction, and protocol revision across many domains.
The article does not claim that organizations, markets, legal systems, biological systems, or AI models literally contain physical black-hole event horizons. Instead, it proposes a functional isomorphism: many complex systems contain boundaries beyond which interior dynamics are no longer directly available to a given observer, and must instead be inferred through compressed trace and residual backreaction.
The practical thesis is simple:
(0.4) Horizon-aware AI should shift from direct explanation to trace-based inference whenever the current protocol cannot reconstruct the interior process.
This gives AI a new anti-hallucination discipline: when the boundary is real, do not invent the interior. Mark the horizon, preserve the residue, read the trace, and recommend protocol revision.





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