Modern physics has achieved extraordinary predictive and mathematical success, yet remains fragmented at the level of interpretation and ontology. Competing languages of particles, fields, spacetime, information, probability, measurement, geometry, and mathematics often describe disclosed physical behavior without fully explaining the conditions that make lawful disclosure possible. The Unified Coherence Closure Framework, or UCCF, proposes that this deeper crisis is not a failure of physics, but a failure of ontological closure. Before reality can be measured, modeled, localized, counted, observed, or formalized, it must first cohere. UCCF identifies coherence closure as the missing condition beneath physical disclosure: coherence stabilizes into boundary, boundary supports distinction, invariance preserves relation, closure permits lawful appearance, and disclosure makes measurement and formal description possible. UCCF is therefore not a rehash of physics, but a framework beneath physics: an attempt to clarify the ontological ground that makes physics, mathematics, law, and observation meaningful.
Philip Lilien (Thu,) studied this question.
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