Foundation MonographJoshua K. Cliff, 2026530 pages · 17 chapters · 11 appendices · CC BY 4.0 Overview Structured systems transform: they form, persist, change, break, and become observable. Mathematical descriptions of transformation have historically been developed within particular domains, using different formalisms for different kinds of systems. This monograph develops a domain-neutral mathematical framework for structured transformation. Principal Dynamics (PD) is built on five axioms (A1–A5) that do not presuppose spacetime, particles, neurons, organisms, or any other domain-specific ontology. These axioms formalize five structural commitments: a pre-geometric substrate carrying a coherence field, a gated gradient-flow evolution law (the Coherence Transformation Equation), an entropy gate enforcing dynamical admissibility, a variational mass definition, and an observation-as-projection architecture. From these axioms, together with explicit regularity hypotheses, the monograph constructs the analytic and structural infrastructure for a general theory of transformation. The framework is intentionally domain-neutral. Companion volumes specialize the same formal structure to declared regimes under a disciplined extension principle. Design Structure: Core and Realization Layers A central design feature of PD is the distinction between its axiomatic core and its realization layers. The five axioms define the domain-neutral transformation structure of the framework. The kernel regularity package KR1–KR6, smooth-upgrade conditions, and bounded-geometry assumptions are not part of the axiomatic core by design. They belong to an analytic realization layer that enables one important realization of the framework: the smooth geometric and PDE-based tier developed in this volume. This separation preserves generality. PD is not restricted to geometric realization. Some regimes may be most naturally expressed through geometric and analytic machinery; others may be symbolic, discrete, networked, or projection-dominant. The axioms define the common structural basis; additional hypotheses determine how that basis is realized in a given layer or regime. What the Monograph Constructs Emergent geometry in two tiers. An analytic tier — metric-measure structure, Dirichlet forms, heat semigroups, and Sobolev spaces from the kernel regularity package KR1–KR6 — and a smooth-upgrade tier yielding a Riemannian manifold with Fisher metric, geodesics, and curvature under additional bounded-geometry hypotheses. Geometry is constructed from interaction structure rather than assumed. The Coherence Transformation Equation (CTE). The central evolution law, derived from a generalized free-energy functional as a gated gradient flow. Gate theory. Hard-gate forward invariance and soft-gate exponential suppression, expressing admissibility as a dynamical constraint. Well-posedness. Local existence and uniqueness via sectorial semigroups, global existence via energy dissipation and gate invariance, higher regularity, and continuous dependence on data and parameters. Global attractor. Compact long-time dynamics with fractal dimension controlled by the system’s confinement scale. Projection functor and ghost filtration. Observation formalized as a categorical projection from the full configuration to the observable layer, with a positivity-preserving restriction on dynamically suppressed components. Symbolic algebra and homological closure. A symbolic operator layer, bar complex, differential, homology, and acyclicity results providing an algebraic backbone for structural classification and regime construction. Regime Extension Principle. A five-phase regime classification and disciplined inheritance architecture (RC1–RC5, governed by EC1–EC8) specifying how companion volumes may specialize the foundation without altering it. Emergent constants, worked examples, and a falsification protocol. Scope and Intended Role The monograph defines a shared formal vocabulary, analytic infrastructure, and inheritance rules for describing structured transformation in a domain-independent way. It is the foundation layer of the PD corpus, not a closure volume for any single regime. Its role is to establish the common framework within which specialized companions can introduce regime-specific structure in a controlled way. Those companion volumes are responsible for regime-level closure work — reproducing known equations, proving structural theorems, and forcing quantitative results on declared classes and branches. This monograph provides the common foundation and the rules governing how such specialization may occur. What Is Not Claimed Geometric regularity is not derived from A1–A5 alone. The kernel regularity package KR1–KR6 and bounded geometry are additional technical hypotheses belonging to the analytic realization layer. This separation is intentional and preserves the domain-neutral scope of the axiomatic core. Regime-specific results are not proved here. The Schrödinger equation, Yang–Mills theory, Einstein field equations, the Born rule, Standard Model gauge-group selection, neural scaling laws, and governance closure are deferred to companion volumes under the Regime Extension Principle. No empirical confirmation is claimed. The monograph defines what would count as confirmation or falsification; it does not assert either. This is not a claim that all regimes reduce to five axioms alone. Specialized companions require additional closure laws, explicitly stated and governed by EC1–EC8. The framework is a foundation, not a finished theory of any particular regime. Corpus Context This is the foundation layer (Layer 1) of the PD corpus, governed by the Program Guide and Scope Charter. It is self-contained as mathematics: every theorem is proved from stated hypotheses using standard techniques. Companion volumes specialize the foundation to declared regimes and prove closure theorems under the Extension Charter. Related volumes: Physics Regime Companion: 10.5281/zenodo.19334816 Intelligence and Computation Regime Companion: 10.5281/zenodo.19334839 Contents The volume is organized in five parts: Foundations (axioms, coherence field, geometry, bundles), The Equation and Its Analysis (free energy, CTE, gates, analytic infrastructure, well-posedness), Projection and the Observable Layer (projection functor, ghost filtration), The Symbolic Layer and Regime Structure (symbolic algebra, homology, regimes, constants), and Contact with Reality (worked examples and empirical protocol). Eleven appendices provide supporting technical material. Keywords: Principal Dynamics, coherence field, gated gradient flow, emergent geometry, structured transformation, domain-neutral mathematics, Sobolev spaces, well-posedness, projection functor, ghost filtration, symbolic algebra, regime extension, realization layers
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Joshua Cliff Joshua K. Cliff (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69cf5e115a333a821460c2f8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19334802
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