This article presents a critical-propositional reading of Aric Dunn’s manuscript A Gate-and-Kernel Framework for Baryogenesis on Descendant Backgrounds in confrontation with the Theory of Objectivity (TO). The study argues that Dunn’s main contribution lies not in offering a complete cosmogony, but in establishing a rigorous methodological discipline for determining when an asymmetry formula has genuinely earned the descendant physical language it employs. The paper examines the conceptual structure of Dunn’s framework—especially the notions of gate, witness maps, primitive source, transport, and final readout—and evaluates its possible compatibilities and tensions with the modal axioms of the Theory of Objectivity. Particular attention is given to the relation between admissibility criteria, relational observability, structural composition, phenomenic elements, Inducer Effects, and the role of transcendent informational mediation understood, in TO terms, as atomic radiations produced in atomic relations. The article argues that Dunn’s framework is scientifically valuable as a regional auditing and model-building tool for baryogenesis on descendant backgrounds, while also showing that it remains ontologically limited when measured against the stronger cosmogonic and modal demands of the Theory of Objectivity. In this sense, the study proposes that Dunn’s framework can be incorporated as an important intermediate methodological instrument for clarifying how structural differences become observable differences under disciplined criteria of admissibility. This analytical work also highlights the dialogue between the analyzed article, the foundational bibliography of the Theory of Objectivity, its recent developments, and selected supporting works in physics, cosmology, and philosophy of science. Note: This analytical text benefited from the analytical support of ChatGPT. KeywordsTheory of Objectivity; baryogenesis; Aric Dunn; modal ontology; descendant backgrounds; gate-and-kernel framework; phenomenic analysis; cosmology; philosophy of physics; asymmetry generation; inductive effects; atomic radiations; modal discipline; critical-propositional reading; Zenodo
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Vidamor Cabannas
Denivaldo Silva
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Cabannas et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e71423cb99343efc98d81d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19650739