This paper introduces “The Chinese Whispers Effect” as a structural concept within the Structural Fingerprint Method (SFM) and the wider Paton System. The framework proposes that informational reality naturally undergoes progressive distortion as it traverses between observers, cultures, symbolic systems, historical reconstruction layers, explanatory compression systems, and operational implementation environments. Rather than treating mythological drift, symbolic mutation, or historical reinterpretation as simple irrationality or fabrication, the paper reframes these processes as recursive information-compression effects emerging through incomplete continuity transfer across time. The paper develops a five-layer admissibility architecture separating: 1. Direct observational structure 2. Structural fingerprint comparison 3. Interpretive compression 4. Symbolic/historical coupling 5. Operational engineering implementation The framework argues that structural recurrence does not automatically imply causal unification, and that continuity narratives may become internally stabilised without external operational verification. Particular emphasis is placed on: - admissibility boundaries, - recursion management, - symbolic compression, - survivorship bias, - historical incompleteness, - and the distinction between narrative continuity and causal continuity. The paper also introduces “Chinese Whispers” as a universal continuity degradation model extending across: - spoken language, - written records, - inscriptions, - mythology, - symbolic systems, - oral traditions, - digital systems, - historical interpretation, - and human-to-human datum transfer. Additionally, the framework examines the difficulty of retroactively applying modern scientific interpretation onto incomplete historical events, where interpretive recursion can rapidly outrun operational admissibility. Figures included: - Figure 1: SFM Historical Event Structural Layering - Figure 2: Chinese Whispers Across Recursive Layers
Andrew John Paton (Wed,) studied this question.