This essay develops a structural account of continuity under the finite conditions of life without recourse to transcyclic identity. Departing from the traditional coupling of continuity and sameness, it proposes a model in which continuity emerges through iterative transformation rather than through the persistence of a subject, substance, or soul. The framework is articulated through four orientations—RO, RQ, SO, and SQ—reinterpreting Harman’s ontological fourfold as functional moments within an iterative process. Central to the model is the concept of a structural surplus that prevents cyclical closure and gives rise to an irreversible spiral. This surplus consists of the accumulation of structural differentiation and the modulation of the semantic field during phases of phenomenal stabilization. While phenomenal contents—memory, meaning, and biographical coherence—are genuinely stored in SQ, they are strictly local and dissolve with the end of that stabilization. What carries over is not content or identity, but a transformed structural condition. Within this framework, death appears not as a transition or passage, but as a necessary structural cut that separates incompatible regimes of storage. Human existence is understood as a local and temporally bounded stabilization within the spiral—neither its carrier nor its goal. Against doctrines of reincarnation and Nietzsche’s notion of the eternal return of the same, the model articulates a form of continuity without recurrence. The essay concludes by proposing iteration without return as a post-nihilistic configuration of meaning: an affirmative account of finitude in which singularity, not repetition, is the condition of significance.
Hans-Joachim Rudolph (Sun,) studied this question.