This record establishes Ontotectonics as a formal domain governing the structural mechanics of human identity under load. It defines identity as a lawful, load-bearing architecture and delineates the conditions under which identity maintains coherence, undergoes rupture, or irreversibly reorganizes under sustained pressure. The document declares the ontological commitments of the domain, including field-dependence of identity transitions, irreversibility of certain structural states, and the exclusion of narrative, symbolic, and interpretive operators. It specifies the axiomatic status of Ontotectonics as a closed, law-governed system without disclosing internal mechanics. Boundary conditions are formally defined: Ontotectonics admits no pedagogical transmission, symbolic mediation, or behavioral substitution. The domain is positioned as irreducible to existing psychological, behavioral, or cognitive frameworks and is governed solely by structural admissibility. This paper functions as the canonical declaration of Ontotectonics as a distinct domain of inquiry.
Avisek Dasgupta (Fri,) studied this question.