Abstract This paper develops a dependency analysis of identity conditions as preconditions for epistemic operations. Rather than arguing that all epistemology reduces to identity, it advances a more modest thesis: many epistemic operations performed by bounded observers appear to presuppose stable same/not-same criteria across recurrence. Measurement, probability, optimization, modeling, explanation, reference, and temporally executed inference are each examined as operations whose coherence depends upon sufficiently stable identity conditions. The paper distinguishes dependency from reduction throughout, explicitly states falsification conditions, and treats competing philosophical vocabularies as potentially different reconstructions of the same structural role. It further relates this lower precondition for inquiry to The Gate Between Constraint and Identification, which identifies an upper limit on finite identification. Together, the two papers bound a working region for inquiry: identity conditions below and identification limits above. Finally, the paper offers a structural interpretation of paradigm shifts as changes in governing equivalence relations while leaving broader universality as an explicit open conjecture.
Devin Bostick (Fri,) studied this question.
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