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https://osf.io/ae8cy/files/osfstorage/6a00bdc98f0f129d2b78ff72
Observer-Compatible World Formation: A Boundary–Gate–Trace Framework for Organizations, Quantum Mechanics, and Relativity
From Macro Systems to the Covariant Event-Ledger Interface
Installment 1 — Abstract, Reader’s Guide, and Sections 1–2
Source note. This article develops the framework from the earlier protocol-first world-formation argument, especially the idea that a world must be declared under P = (B, Δ, h, u) before it can be compared across domains. It also draws on the Gauge Grammar and Self-Organization Substrate Principle, where field, identity, mediator, binding, gate, trace, invariance, and observer potential are treated as functional roles rather than literal substance identities.
Abstract
Many stable systems appear to repeat the same structural grammar across scale. Quantum mechanics, relativity, thermodynamics, cells, organizations, legal systems, financial markets, AI runtimes, scientific models, and civilizations all require some version of boundary, identity, mediation, binding, gate, trace, residual, invariance, and revision.
The easy but dangerous explanation is loose analogy. One may say that markets are “like” quantum fields, organizations are “like” organisms, legal systems are “like” ledgers, and AI agents are “like” observers. Such analogies may be suggestive, but they are often undisciplined. They easily confuse role with substance.
This article proposes a stricter framework: Observer-Compatible World Formation, abbreviated as OCWF.
Its central claim is not that organizations are quantum systems, nor that finance is secretly physics, nor that legal systems literally instantiate gauge theory. Its claim is more modest but more useful:
A stable world is not merely a collection of objects. A stable world is a field made usable by bounded observers through boundary, identity, mediation, binding, gate, trace, residual, invariance, and admissible revision. (0.1)
In compact form:
World_P = Field_P + Identity_P + Mediation_P + Binding_P + Gate_P + Trace_P + Residual_P + Invariance_P + Revision_P. (0.2)
Here the subscript P matters. A system is never interpreted “as such.” It is interpreted under a declared protocol:
P = (B, Δ, h, u). (0.3)
where B is boundary, Δ is observation or aggregation rule, h is time or state window, and u is admissible intervention family.
Under this protocol, a world is not simply given. It is declared, projected, gated, traced, audited, and revised:
Σ₀ → Declare_P → Project_P → Gate_P → Trace_P + Residual_P → InvarianceTest_P → Revise_P → Σ′. (0.4)
This article argues that the same grammar appears in two very different directions.
At the macro level, organizations, markets, courts, schools, firms, religions, scientific institutions, and AI systems externalize this grammar through boundaries, roles, reports, approvals, records, audits, residual registers, and revision procedures.
At the fundamental physics level, quantum mechanics, special relativity, general relativity, and thermodynamics can be reread as partial disciplines of observer-compatible world formation. Quantum mechanics governs how potential becomes recordable event. Special relativity governs how event relations survive frame transformation. General relativity governs how causal-metric structure becomes dynamic. Thermodynamics governs why closure, erasure, and trace formation carry residual cost.
The framework therefore does not replace physics. It supplies an interface language:
QuantumElement → FunctionalRole → ProtocolBoundSystemRole. (0.5)
The final Appendix A develops the most speculative implication: OCWF may suggest a Covariant Event-Ledger Interface among quantum mechanics, special relativity, and general relativity. This appendix does not claim to solve quantum gravity. It proposes that any observer-compatible unification must preserve quantum event formation, relativistic causal admissibility, frame covariance, geometric backreaction, trace formation, residual accounting, and macro coarse-graining.
In one sentence:
OCWF studies the conditions under which a field becomes stable enough to be observed, governed, remembered, compared across frames, and revised without destroying continuity. (0.6)
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