This paper introduces Phase Mathematics as a foundational calculus of coherence relations. In standard physics, phase is usually treated as a cyclic parameter, wave orientation, Hilbert-space angle, or gauge relation. Here, phase is generalized into a deeper mathematical role: phase is the first differentiable orientation of coherence. The central thesis is that coherence does not simply become form by fragmentation or reduction. Rather, coherence becomes relationally expressible through phase differentiation. Resonance then arises as the interaction of phase-differentiated coherence, and structure emerges where resonance stabilizes. The resulting cascade is Coherence -> Phase Differentiation -> Resonance -> Stabilized Structure. The paper defines coherence, phase, phase difference, resonance, phaspace, and stabilized structure; introduces an operator triad consisting of the Coherence Operator, Phase Shift Operator, and Resonance Operator; and proposes an initial axiom system for phase-based mathematics. It distinguishes phase space, the classical representational manifold of positions and momenta, from phaspace, the generative coherence domain in which phase relations produce transformation, relation, and structure. Phase Mathematics is therefore not merely a reinterpretation of existing phase concepts; it is a proposed foundational mathematics in which number, geometry, logic, field relation, and physical manifestation are understood as phase-stabilized expressions of coherence. Keywords: Phase Mathematics; phaspace; coherence; resonance; phase differentiation; coherence phase; phase equivalence; coherence operator; resonance operator; stabilized structure; foundational mathematics; UCCF.
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Philip Lilien
University Foundation
University Foundation
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Philip Lilien (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a192eb9fab5b468c4418036 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20418995
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