This working paper proposes a three-level emergent architecture of social time, describing the transition from timeless informational potentiality through a subjective dimension to collective temporality. Drawing upon Sorkin's anhomomorphic logic and Q-methodology, we argue that social time arises not through the summation of individual states (the classical model), but through the coherence of contextual subjective collapses (the non-classical model). Each level—Information, Measurement/Subjectivity, and Social Time—represents a distinct ontological and logical regime, where transitions are governed by acts of measurement and collective synchronisation. This framework challenges the additive-commutative assumptions of classical sociology, positing social temporality as an emergent effect of non-local, context-dependent interactions. The paper operationalises key sociological concepts—Bourdieu's habitus, Giddens's structuration, and Emirbayer & Mische's temporal agency—through the three-level architecture, demonstrating that these are different manifestations of a single fundamental process: the decoherence of the social. Empirical analysis of Russian public opinion dynamics during the 2022 invasion of Ukraine reveals systematic anomalies in classical explanations (rally effect, fear of repression, propaganda), which are predicted a priori by the quantum coherence model. The paper proposes specific empirical tests for discriminating between classical and non-classical models, including violations of Bell-CHSH inequalities in social correlations. This work is part of a broader research programme connecting the emergence of time in quantum gravity with the emergence of social time through a common logical foundation.
Dmitry Timofeev (Tue,) studied this question.