Applying an extranumerary interdimensional eye to the complex, adaptive yet strategic dynamics of climate change.
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Applying an extranumerary interdimensional eye to the complex, adaptive yet strategic dynamics of climate change.
The aim of Applied Field Logic is to provide a common mathematical language for describing (ie systemic) patterns of organised persistence.
Meaning is not stored in words; it emerges as harmonic structure through time.
How possibility becomes reality, and why that gap keeps us alive. Time is what turns possibility into fact, starlight into living dust, experience into oblivion. Holding a stone in your hand is holding a pocket full of unrealised futures: nothing has moved, yet movement is waiting. Let it go and those possibilities rush into action […]
Biological evolution can be read not as a ladder of material refinement but as a synchronisation phenomenon—a system exhibiting Kuramoto-like synchronisation (1984), a mathematical model of how independent oscillators—like fireflies or human hearts—fall into rhythm. Each organism, gene, or mind acts as an oscillator, sustaining an internal rhythm through cycles of metabolism, reproduction, or thought. […]
When we speak, think, or write, it feels like we’re exchanging units of meaning—words, symbols, concepts—as if they were coins passed from hand to hand. But look closer, and something else is happening. Meaning isn’t a thing we hold. It’s a pattern of difference that holds us in structure. Consider two basic ways to move […]