This paper advances the proposal that stable dimensionality does not begin as an already-finished integer structure, but emerges through a prior regime of coherence-curvature equilibrium near π, followed by a reduction process into the first stable dimensional closure at 3.0. Within this framework, 3.14 is interpreted as a pre-stable dimensional equilibrium condition, while the interval between 3.14 and 3.0 is treated as a regime of partial closure, turbulence, and excess reduction. The first stable dimensional lock-in is identified with 3.0, formally associated with the emergence of SO(3) as the first stable rotational closure. The paper situates this dimensional stabilization architecture alongside a parallel abstract closure-threshold architecture running from s=1 through the interval 1<s<2 to the first stable threshold at s=2. The harmonic interval 1<s<2 is interpreted as an abstract regime of partial closure, while s=2 marks the first stable closure threshold in the harmonic architecture. These two systems are argued to be coupled rather than identical the harmonic sequence defines closure classes abstractly, while the dimensional sequence realizes closure through equilibrium, turbulence, lock-in, and infratier reduction. Within this broader framework, Atomic Continuum Ontology (ACO) appears twice: abstractly as the interval of partial closure between harmonic openness and threshold stabilization, and dimensionally as the reduction band through which the π-equilibrium condition is converted into stable 3-dimensional order. Turbulence is correspondingly reinterpreted not as accidental disorder, but as the dynamical signature of incomplete closure. The residual difference 3.14−3.0=0.14 is treated as closure excess, turbulence budget, and stabilization cost. The paper further proposes that the infratiers 2.85 and 2.70 represent further closure reductions beneath the first stable dimensional threshold, generating the 1, 3, 8 series as successive lower closure classes. A minimal formal appendix introduces named transition laws governing openness, partial closure, threshold stabilization, dimensional equilibrium, turbulence reduction, stable lock-in, and infratier generation. The central claim is that dimension is not primitive, but emerges through closure. Keywords π-equilibrium; dimensional emergence; SO(3); closure theory; turbulence; Atomic Continuum Ontology; coherence-curvature equilibrium; stable dimension; infratier reduction; generator series; closure excess
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Philip Lilien
University Foundation
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Philip Lilien (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e9baeb85696592c86ecd29 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19686674