https://chatgpt.com/share/69ffc04e-4998-83eb-babc-27c37ab2cbe9
https://osf.io/ae8cy/files/osfstorage/69ffbfc888878a0f3e78fda2
From Interfaces to Isomorphisms: A Protocol-Bound Theory of World Formation
How Bounded Observers Turn Fields into Operational Worlds — and Why Physics, Life, Organizations, Finance, Law, and AI Reuse the Same Grammar
Abstract
Many complex systems appear to repeat the same structural grammar across scale. Physical fields, living cells, financial markets, legal systems, organizations, AI runtimes, educational institutions, and scientific models all require some version of boundary, identity, mediation, binding, gate, trace, residual, invariance, and revision. The temptation is to explain this recurrence through loose analogy: markets are “like” quantum fields, organizations are “like” organisms, AI agents are “like” minds, legal systems are “like” ledgers, and so on. But loose analogy is not enough. It may inspire language, but it does not discipline comparison.
This article proposes a more constrained framework: Protocol-Bound World Formation. Its central claim is that many cross-domain similarities become useful only after we declare the protocol under which a system is being observed, measured, acted upon, recorded, and revised.
The protocol is:
P = (B, Δ, h, u). (0.1)
where B is boundary, Δ is observation or aggregation rule, h is time or state window, and u is the admissible intervention family.
Under such a protocol, a system is not treated as a raw object “in itself.” It is treated as a declared world:
World_P = (X, q, φ, P). (0.2)
where q is the baseline environment and φ is the feature map that specifies what counts as structure.
This protocol-first move connects two seemingly different intellectual directions.
The first direction is Engineering Interface. It asks how a deep idea becomes a usable, testable, revisable operational world. A philosophical or theoretical insight is not merely stated. It is given boundary, observables, gates, trace rules, residual handling, invariance tests, and revision paths.
DeepIdea → Interface_P → OperationalWorld_P. (0.3)
The second direction is Protocol-Bound Macro Isomorphism. It asks why stabilized worlds across many domains repeatedly display similar structural roles: field, identity, mediator, binding, gate, trace, invariance, and observer potential.
OperationalWorld_P → RoleGrammar_P → Ledger_P → GovernedIntervention_P. (0.4)
These two directions are not separate theories. They are the generative and analytical sides of the same deeper ontology.
Engineering Interface builds worlds from the inside. (0.5)
Macro Isomorphism recognizes worlds from the outside. (0.6)
The shared ontology is this:
WorldFormation_P = Declaration_P + Interface_P + RoleGrammar_P + GaugeInvariance_P + Ledger_P + ResidualGovernance_P + AdmissibleRevision_P. (0.7)
This article does not claim that finance, biology, law, AI, or organizations are literally quantum systems. It follows the stricter position that quantum and gauge theory provide a disciplined role grammar rather than a literal cross-domain ontology: a cell is not a fermion, a contract is not a gluon, a market is not a Yang–Mills field, and an AI verifier is not a W boson. The legitimate transfer happens at the level of function under declared protocol, not substance identity.
The practical result is a framework for disciplined world analysis. A bounded observer declares a protocol, projects visible structure, gates commitment, writes trace, preserves residual, tests invariance, and revises admissibly. Where this process stabilizes, cross-domain isomorphisms become visible. Where it fails, the framework records residual rather than hiding it.
In one sentence:
Interfaces build worlds; isomorphisms reveal their recurring anatomy; protocols keep both honest. (0.8)
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