This paper develops the regime‑based structure of the coherence parameter c(t) as the organising principle of Level‑1 representational physics. Building on the stabilisation criteria and state‑mapping formalism introduced in Paper 12, it identifies three coherence regimes—high‑c, intermediate‑c, and low‑c—and shows how major quantum and relativistic phenomena arise as direct consequences of transitions between these regimes. Decoherence is reformulated as a fundamental representational drift driven by the monotonic decrease of c(t), rather than as an environment‑induced process. Tunneling is reinterpreted as bandwidth exit: a Level‑1 mode becomes evanescent in low‑coherence regions and reappears when stabilisation becomes possible again. Entanglement and Bell violations are described as manifestations of shared Level‑1 modes, whose breakdown under decreasing coherence naturally yields classical correlations. Horizon‑like behaviour emerges as a coherence boundary rather than a geometric surface. The resulting framework unifies decoherence, tunneling, entanglement, Bell inequalities, and horizon phenomena under a single representational principle. Paper 13 thus provides the dynamical bridge between the operational constructions of Paper 12 and the empirical analyses developed in Paper 14.
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H.N. van Roon (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d34eac9c07852e0af984e3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19414773
H.N. van Roon
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