We present a quantitative structural analysis of the papal encyclical Magnifica Humanitas(Leo XIV, 2026) using the TRACE Structural Intelligence Suite, a computational frameworkfor transforming institutional text into computable structure. The central finding is thatsemantic deconvolution subtraction of the institutional centroid from segment embeddings collapses inter-segment uniformity from 97% to −3%, revealing 4 differentiated clusters viaunsupervised K-Means classification. This provides evidence that the apparent institutionalvoice can be decomposed into measurable residual signals beneath the surface homogeneity.Across a corpus of 44,482 words in Spanish distributed over 3,547 extracted textual units, tenanalytical engines were deployed. Additional structural properties include: (1) a semanticgraph of 23 nodes and 28 edges with statistically elevated modularity (Q = 0.6144, Z = 4.55,empirical p < 0.005 based on N = 200 null-model simulations) across 6 communities;(2) the node “United Nations” (B = 0.21) functions as the highest-betweenness hub, whoseablation fragments the graph into 6 isolated components; (3) 8 cosine discontinuity scarsbelow −1.8σ; and (4) institutional tension indicators registering peaks of 50.0 in the finalquarter, with a statistically significant increase (p = 0.004, χ2 test) in exclamation andinterrogation mark density. These findings describe measurable structural properties. Theydo not imply authorial attribution, editorial manipulation, or judgment on doctrinal content.The study extends the TRACE framework previously applied to legislative architecture(Abella, 2026c) to ecclesiastical institutional discourse, demonstrating domain-transferablestructural intelligence.
Ruben Abella (Mon,) studied this question.