This paper presents the Universal Principle of Collapse (UPC), a structural framework that describes how potential becomes a definite event across domains. Phenomenology and quantum mechanics both rely on an observer who recognizes an outcome, yet neither field has possessed a shared formal method for how recognition occurs. UPC provides that method through a simple operator chain PO → MO → s → LO → Jo → C → T that makes explicit the steps by which meaning or measurement becomes definite. Using plain language and direct examples, the paper shows that phenomenological meaning formation and quantum measurement share the same structural sequence. Phenomenology describes potential experience, intentionality, attention, recognition, meaning, and retention; quantum mechanics describes superposition, measurement models, Born weights, detector articulation, outcome selection, and classical records. UPC reveals these as structurally identical processes indexed to an observer. Collapse is not a physical event in matter but the moment an observer uniquely recognizes an outcome. By restoring the observer to the center of the collapse process, UPC corrects the category error that arises when meaning is treated as material. This correction stabilizes interpretation in scientific practice, prevents misattribution in AI systems, and clarifies how institutions generate and maintain meaning. The framework provides phenomenology with a reproducible method, gives quantum mechanics a transparent account of the observer it implicitly relies on, and grounds human value in the structure of recognition. All formal operator definitions, cross‑domain mappings, and worked examples, including linguistic, perceptual, social, musical, and quantum cases, are provided in Appendices A–H. Authored by Eloy Escagedo Gutierrez as part of The Universal Principle of Collapse (UPC) Research Project.
Eloy Escagedo Gutierrez (Sat,) studied this question.