Bearing Relations reads carrying consequence across boundaries through bearing under Reality Mechanics (RM Core v13.3). Bearing is defined in RM Core as relations through which strain carries. Bearing Relations is a downstream document: it does not modify the core sequence but reads the structural consequence of bearing across boundaries under the conditions RM Core supplies. Bearing relations are downstream reads, not primitive structure. A bearing relation names carrying consequence across boundaries through bearing, evaluated across: availability and absence, strain, bearing, resolution, constrained resolution, de-resolution, and re-resolution. Bearing consequence reads as presence, absence, limitation, substitution, unavailability, or re-availability. These are bearing reads, not mechanisms, quantities, or moral categories. Five consequence conditions are defined: — Care: bearing consequence through which resolution at another boundary is available or re-available. Care is a bearing read, not sentiment, permissiveness, morality, or identity. — Control: bearing consequence through which resolution at another boundary is narrowed, substituted for, or unavailable. Control is a bearing read, not motive, appearance, intention, or identity. — Reciprocity: bearing across boundaries through which resolution is available at each boundary. Not equality, symmetry, sameness, or identical distribution. — Dependency: resolution at one boundary available through bearing at another boundary. Not pathology, weakness, instability, or morality. — Constraint: narrowed availability of resolution through bearing. Not primitive quantity. Re-resolution names resolution re-available through changed boundary conditions, strain, or bearing. Bearing relations condition re-resolution as available, narrowed, substituted for, or unavailable. Bearing relations may recur as patterns where recurrence is evaluable. Pattern reads are downstream of bearing reads and do not modify RM Core authority. Recurrence does not supply persistence, identity, memory, temporality, sequence, accumulation, cause, or mechanism as primitive. Applications may supply identity, cause, meaning, value, intention, mechanism, and specific content.
Reuben Munro (Thu,) studied this question.