This paper develops a structural and phenomenological account of Recursive Continuity Interruption within the PATON System Cognitive Branch. The originating observation concerns the disproportionate effect that external interruption may have upon high-density recursive cognition. Many conventional descriptions of concentration assume a relatively linear cognitive structure consisting of one active task, one primary thought stream, and one recoverable point of focus. The cognitive state examined here appears structurally different. During writing, modelling, symbolic interpretation, archive construction, recursive self-observation, and complex conceptual integration, cognition may temporarily maintain a distributed field containing multiple active concepts, unresolved branches, weighted relationships, document locations, symbolic correspondences, anticipated continuations, rejected alternatives, emotional salience, and adjacency pathways. The resulting state is described as a recursive continuity field. Under this interpretation, interruption does not merely redirect attention away from one thought. It may destabilise the temporary relational topology that allows multiple cognitive structures to remain mutually accessible and directionally organised. The person may retain the subject, the documents, and much of the underlying knowledge while losing their position within the structure, the relationship between active elements, the reason a particular connection mattered, the ordering of unresolved branches, and the next intended continuation. This paper therefore distinguishes content loss from position loss. It introduces interruption debt as the additional cognitive expenditure required to reconstruct a disrupted continuity field. It also develops the concepts of recursive state decay, field fragmentation, operating-mode displacement, re-entry anchors, external continuity scaffolding, protected traversal corridors, and topology reconstruction. The phenomenological statement: “The folders are in my head.” is treated as a structurally meaningful description of internally maintained organisation rather than a casual metaphor. Using Continuity Empathy, the paper asks: What internally maintained continuity was active before the interruption, what portion of that continuity collapsed, and what reconstruction cost is now being imposed? The paper’s central proposition is: Recursive continuity interruption occurs when external disruption destabilises the temporary topology through which multiple cognitive structures, adjacency relations, salience weights, and traversal positions are being simultaneously maintained. The framework is structural, phenomenological, and interpretive. It does not claim that every interruption produces cognitive collapse, nor does it diagnose any neurological or psychiatric condition.
A J Paton (Fri,) studied this question.