12C — NO room for Paradox - The Topology of Pathology - The Cipher This work reads the classical paradoxes not as defects of thought but as a map. Within the ONE AXIOM coherence programme, every well-posed paradox is shown to land on the same small, structured object: the thirteen-element FORBIDDEN complement of the 51:13 coherence partition — a set generated by exactly three irreducible states: self-reference without cost (7★), scale / layer / domain confusion (18★), and causal or logical order reversal (36★). This complement is the topology of pathology, and it is the subject of the paper. From it follows a single read-key — the cipher — a four-step decode that takes any paradox to (i) the forbidden state it attempts to instantiate, (ii) the generator(s) of that state, and (iii) the canonical structural move that deactivates it: coherence-selection for 7★, Π-separation for 18★, and the σ-irreversible decision order for 36★, yielding the verdicts ill-generated, dissolved, or category-error. The 89 catalogued paradoxes (with 4 variants, 93 entries) are held in one register — the Deactivation Atlas — which serves as the single source of truth for every verdict. The epistemic posture is stated plainly. Gödel incompleteness, the Halting problem, the Liar, Russell's paradox, Banach–Tarski and the rest are deactivated — re-read in a frame where they no longer generate a contradiction — never "refuted" or "solved" in their own terms. A genuine paradox is treated as a signal that a problem has been posed in the wrong domain, not as a flaw in reality. Alongside the catalogue, the paper adds a compact formal apparatus — a definition, two lemmas, and two theorems — that seals the three generators onto the framework's coherence-wave equation (each generator the degeneracy of exactly one non-inertial term) and shows the generator set complete, with no fourth generator. It closes with the Troubadours: the paradox-authors, from Zeno to Kavka, re-read as the first cartographers of the same topology. Part of the ONE AXIOM series. Robert Spychalski.
Robert Spychalski (Fri,) studied this question.