This paper introduces and formally situates The Continuance, a non-teleological reference framework for long-horizon civilizational persistence under irreversible uncertainty. Building on the Structural Theory of Everything (STE I–III), which establishes irreversibility, variance dominance, and collapse-aware control as structural constraints on adaptive systems, this work operates at the symbolic and organizational layer where governance, naming, and coordination affect system stability. We argue that continuation at civilizational scale is not primarily a technical or moral problem, but a variance-management problem spanning affect, interpretation, institutional drift, and authority capture. In this context, naming is treated as a control mechanism rather than a rhetorical device: names compress meaning, regulate emotional temperature, and constrain future interpretive variance. The paper derives structural criteria for a valid continuation reference, including neutrality, non-teleology, non-ownership, and resistance to threat framing. Based on these constraints, the term The Continuance is introduced as a low-variance symbolic anchor denoting persistence without promise, survival without triumph, and duration without prediction. This work does not prescribe policies, institutions, or actions. Instead, it defines the conditions under which governance frameworks, programs, or future initiatives may remain stable without amplifying systemic risk. STE IV thus completes the transition from formal irreversibility (STE I–II) and civilizational variance analysis (STE III) to a continuation framework capable of operating across generations without inducing collapse dynamics.
B. Sworup (Thu,) studied this question.