Before the theory, there was a form La Profilée did not begin as a theory. It began as a design. Marc Maibom was developing a new watch architecture — a silhouette with its own identity, not traceable to any existing archetype in the watch industry. The goal was purely formal: a shape that was unmistakably itself. What emerged was a watch with a stable outer frame, a structural opening, and an inner space that could carry entirely different components. Working further with this form, something unexpected became visible: the same frame could hold an analogue movement, a digital display, a smartwatch module, a compass — and in each case, the watch remained recognizably itself. Identity was preserved across transformation. The same architecture worked across other objects. Furniture. Jewelry. Technical devices. Different scales, different materials, different functions — the same underlying structure. The form was already a structural law before it was understood as one. Only later came the formal derivation: from two minimal conditions — that states are distinguishable, and that real transformation occurs — the same architecture follows as a structural necessity. The watch had built it before any theorem was written. This paper maps the correspondence. Not as metaphor. As structural identity between a physical object and a formally derived law.
Marc Maibom (Mon,) studied this question.