This paper introduces a minimal generative scaffold—metapiris, genoplas, and manifold—as a domain‑neutral framework for understanding how stable difference arises. Rather than proposing a unifying metaphysics, the paper analyzes how diverse domains implicitly rely on the same structural grammar when describing the emergence, differentiation, and persistence of form.The scaffold is examined through five independent cases: time, theology, biology, consciousness, and society. Each domain organizes its internal logic through (1) a source of generative potential, (2) a process that draws distinctions, and (3) a structured field in which those distinctions stabilize. These mappings do not reduce the domains to one another; instead, they reveal a shared generative architecture that remains consistent across conceptual, empirical, experiential, and social systems.The framework is intentionally minimal. It does not replace domain‑specific theories but clarifies the structural commitments they presuppose. By abstracting away from content and focusing on generative form, the scaffold enables comparison without collapse and offers a clean way to analyze how systems produce and maintain difference.Although the paper focuses on five foundational domains, the scaffold extends naturally to others. Mathematical, linguistic, economic, and aesthetic systems also exhibit triadic generative organization, suggesting broader applicability and future directions for research.
Denis Bailey (Sun,) studied this question.