Abstract This orientation note explains the developmental lens that led to the identity-persistence theorem. It is not part of the formal proof stack and does not advance additional ontological, physical, biological, computational, or metaphysical claims. The note clarifies why the current program was narrowed from earlier coherence-oriented exploratory materials into the specific formal problem of identity persistence under transformation. Its central purpose is to distinguish the developmental lens from the canonical claim: the lens motivated the search, while the theorem carries the public claim. The canonical program remains restricted to identity persistence under transformation within explicit admissibility constraints. Earlier materials that make broader claims about probability replacement, physics, consciousness, free will, AGI, primes, chirality, or universal substrate language are superseded wherever they exceed the current formal stack. The note argues that the identity-persistence problem matters because many modern systems depend on memory, replay, state, audit, continuity, and agency while leaving the invariant that licenses sameness through transformation implicit. It also explains how invariants reduce arbitrary degrees of freedom in knowledge formation without implying ontological finality. This document should be read as a program-orientation and scope-boundary note. It provides context for the identity-persistence theorem and its disciplined extensions, but it does not itself extend the theorem.
Devin Bostick (Fri,) studied this question.