This manuscript develops a scale‑invariant architecture of reality, showing how the same structural grammar—center, orientation, coherence, distortion, collapse, and renewal—appears in systems, persons, relationships, societies, and faith. The work is not written from the stance of an expert but from the position of a Christian seeking clarity, coherence, and intellectual honesty. It offers a unified framework that explains how meaning emerges, how identity stabilizes, how relationships form and fail, how societies rise and collapse, and how renewal becomes possible at every scale.Across eight parts, the manuscript moves from foundational systems theory to human psychology, relational dynamics, social structures, and a structural reading of the Christian story. The Christian layer is presented not as dogma but as a narrative that aligns naturally with the architecture uncovered in the earlier sections. The work concludes with an embodied account of how orientation becomes practice, how coherence becomes habit, and how love becomes the highest stabilizing operation in human life.At its core, the manuscript argues that the search for coherence across all layers of existence is inseparable from the search for the meaning of life, and that this meaning becomes intelligible when reality is understood as structured orientation. The result is a rational, coherent worldview that integrates systems theory, human experience, relational life, social order, and Christian theology into one unified structure
Denis Bailey (Tue,) studied this question.
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