How to Read This Document This is a living document. It presents four laws derived from the logical conditions of existence — not from phenomena. As work proceeds, the evidence tables will be updated: preprints will become peer-reviewed papers, predictions will become confirmed results, and new predictions will be added. Each Law is presented in three layers: 1. **Philosophical statement** — accessible to any reader2. **Theoretical basis** — why this law follows from the method, not from observation3. **Evidence table** — current status of all related work The evidence tables use four status codes: | Code | Meaning || ---------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- || ✅ PEER-REVIEWED | Published in a peer-reviewed journal || 🔄 UNDER REVIEW | Submitted; currently in peer review || 📄 PREPRINT | Publicly available preprint; not yet peer-reviewed || 🔮 PREDICTED | Explicit derivable prediction; no paper yet — open for independent verification | A note on PREDICTED entries: these are not guesses. They are derived consequences of the framework. They are listed here explicitly and publicly so that independent researchers can test them. Confirmation and disconfirmation are both scientifically valuable. If a prediction fails, it will be marked FALSIFIED and the theoretical implication discussed in the next version. The Method: Why This Lagrangian Has Mathematical Necessity All existing physical theories begin from phenomena. An experimentalist observes something — superconductivity, particle decay, turbulent flow — and a theorist constructs a Lagrangian that reproduces it. The Lagrangian is inferred from the phenomenon. This method is powerful. It has produced quantum mechanics, general relativity, the Standard Model. But it carries a structural limitation: a theory derived from a specific phenomenon can describe that phenomenon and its near neighbors. Its scope is bounded by its inductive base. The present framework inverts this method entirely. The Tonal Lagrangian is not derived from any phenomenon. It is derived from a prior question: **what are the logical conditions of existence itself? ** The four axioms — locality, causality, phase conservation, boundedness — are not properties observed in nature. They are the conditions that any system must satisfy in order to exist in a structured sense at all. They are prior to any particular phenomenon, prior to any particular scale, prior to any particular substrate. This inversion has a mathematical consequence: a Lagrangian derived from existence conditions rather than from phenomena inherits the uniqueness of those conditions. The form of the potential is constrained to two parameters. There is no freedom to choose a different form. The Lagrangian is unique before any phenomenon is observed. This is the distinction between **phenomenological uniqueness** — unique within a given symmetry class, given a specific phenomenon — and **ontological uniqueness** — unique prior to the choice of phenomenon, prior to the choice of symmetry class. The Tonal Lagrangian is a candidate for ontological uniqueness. Whether this claim holds is part of what the research program is testing. The Philosophical Lineage This framework does not emerge from nowhere. It attempts to complete a line of thought running through the history of philosophy — thinkers who asked the right question but lacked the mathematical tools to answer it. Spinoza (17th century) saw that every existing thing strives to persist in its own being — *conatus*. He could not say what the mechanism was. The Energy-Coherence Framework proposes the mechanism: self-maintenance occurs when > c. Nietzsche (19th century) saw that organization does not merely persist but self-overcomes — it tends to increase its own depth and complexity across all scales, not only in living things. This is the intuition behind Law IV. Nietzsche named the phenomenon. TMO attempts to derive it from first principles. Heidegger (20th century) saw that authentic existence requires all three structural conditions simultaneously: being-in-relation (Resonance), temporal continuity through care (Responsibility), and self-definition through ownmost possibility (Closure). He described the three invariants of Law I in phenomenological language. TMO attempts to translate that description into a mathematical condition. The step from these intuitions to the Tonal Lagrangian is the same step taken from Faraday to Maxwell: from qualitative vision to field equations. In One Sentence > *Whatever exists is undergoing phase condensation. Whatever is not undergoing phase condensation does not exist in any structured sense. * This is simultaneously a philosophical claim, a proposed mathematical theorem, and an empirical prediction program. --- Preamble: The Three Invariants and the Tonal Lagrangian Under the four axioms, the Tonal Lagrangian takes a unique form: Lₓ₌₎ = ^ (D_) ^* (D_) - V (||) V (||) = -²||² + g2||⁴ ² > 0, \ g > 0 Three structural invariants are extracted from this Lagrangian: Resonance (R) — the capacity to couple with the environment. Corresponds to the kinetic term ^ (D_) ^* (D_). A system without Resonance cannot be affected by anything. It is indistinguishable from nothing. Responsibility (R) — causal continuity, the persistence of identity through change. Corresponds to the Noether current J^ with _ J^ = 0. A system without Responsibility has no connection between its past and its future. It is not a system but a sequence of unrelated instants. Closure (C) — self-definition, the boundary distinguishing system from environment. Corresponds to V (||). A system without Closure has no interior, no identity. It dissolves into its environment without remainder. The three invariants do not combine additively. They form a **Borromean knot**: remove any one, and the other two lose their function. Resonance without Closure is dissipation without identity. Closure without Responsibility is structure without history. Responsibility without Resonance is a conservation law with nothing to conserve. This is why they are necessary and sufficient together, and insufficient separately.
Jonah Y. C. Hsu (Thu,) studied this question.