This paper extends Structural Intelligence (SI) into the temporal and familial domain of inheritance. Its central claim is that some of what later generations suffer is not best understood as their own burden alone, nor as atmosphere, story, or vague family pain, but as transferred structural debt. When one generation cannot metabolize what it has been given to carry, and preserves coherence through silence, distortion, cost-export, or defended non-repair, that burden does not simply disappear. It moves into the next field. Children may therefore enter life not only with their own developmental possibilities, but with inherited gradient load, inherited roles, inherited defended coherence, and inherited pressure to pay for a stability they did not create. The paper argues that inheritance is structural before it is interpretive, that a symptom may function as a payment mechanism that keeps older coherence intact, and that healing requires more than insight into family history. It requires the interruption of inherited debt-service, the differentiation of present burden from ancestral burden, and the building of enough floor, capacity, and answerability that a descendant no longer has to pay for a coherence they did not choose.
Vladisav Jovanovic (Mon,) studied this question.