Why do family roles feel inevitable, and why does a child occupy a functional position that no conscious choice or later effort can fully erase? Existing multi‑agent models of social interaction assume that roles emerge from negotiation, learning, or power dynamics. They cannot explain why two complete parental vectors do not blend but must collide to form a stable core, and why the child’s first function is determined by a structural gap rather than by personality or preference. Volume 39 of Symbolic Mechanics formalises family formation as a collision between two 100% pressure sources. The father and mother each enter a new family with their own full load of fear, culture, function, and inherited structural delay. These two vectors do not cooperate. They lock, resist, and counterbalance each other. The family’s pressure core is not created through harmony – it is forged through collision‑based stabilisation. The equilibrium point of repeated collisions becomes the family’s crisis map. The child enters this collision field and automatically computes a position. The allocation rule is: ChildPosition(i) = f(parental collision, structural gap, instinct computation) or in compressed form: ChildPosition(i) = Gap × Absorption × Fixation The child identifies the structural void created by parental collision, absorbs unclaimed pressure, and becomes fixed in a functional position. The child’s role is not personality. It is the system’s most efficient stabilizing response to the parental vector collision. The father’s delayed activation produces the first shadow of every new family – not through failure, but through structural necessity. This model provides a computational framework for role allocation, family core stabilisation, and the inevitability of intergenerational function transfer – problems that standard social simulators cannot resolve because they lack a collision‑based pressure core architecture. --- Part of the 44‑volume Symbolic Mechanics system. For the foundational engine mechanics → Volume I For the Family Table and pressure core → Volume XXXVI For the paternal shadow and structural delay → Volume XXXVIII For the father‑line asymmetry → Volume XL Keywords: Symbolic Mechanics, parental vector, collision‑based stabilisation, pressure core, child position allocation, structural gap, crisis map
A.N. Eidos (Fri,) studied this question.