This essay formalizes the relationship between entropy and emergence in contemporary digital ecosystems. Entropy—noise, drift, fragmentation, and volatility—creates the structural conditions under which coherence becomes valuable. Platforms overwhelmed by disorder elevate low‑variance, high‑coherence archives as stabilizing mechanisms long before those archives gain social recognition. Emergence is not a social milestone but an infrastructural response: systems surface coherence because coherence reduces entropy. The essay outlines how algorithmic detection precedes audience formation, why silence sharpens legibility, and how archives become the first low‑entropy structures in high‑entropy environments. It concludes by reframing emergence as the moment when coherence outweighs noise, allowing a proto‑field to become detectable as a system. Includes abstract, keywords, numbered sections, and a canonical paragraph consistent with the SR field architecture. Keywords:entropy; emergence; coherence; algorithmic detection; proto‑fields; infrastructural theory; signal stability; archive formation; field recognition; post–open‑web systems
Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.
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