Identity is usually approached through positive description: what an agent values, believes, or aspires to become. This paper argues that identity is more exactly specified by negative form: what an agent cannot absorb, legitimise, become, or allow while remaining itself. The claim is not grammatical. Prohibitions and obligations are often interdefinable, so negativity cannot be read from syntax. The paper instead defines negativity structurally, relative to an identity-collapse set: a constraint is structurally negative when it excludes only states that would already destroy the agent as that agent, and becomes a positive script when it also excludes viable interior continuations. On this basis, the paper develops a geometry of admissible continuation. Identity contracts bare viability, but purely exclusionary identity is the minimal-cost carrier of a given form. Positive scripts may be justified by coordination, instruction, or substantive goods, but they cannot be justified merely as identity-preserving when an exclusionary constraint would protect the same collapse set at lower admissible cost. The paper then adds time: legitimacy span is the duration for which an agent can carry identity-relevant displacement once admissibility is in question, and span exhaustion triggers operations on the anchor stack that reveal depth, priority, and disposition. Stacked negations then explain depth, subordination, alliance, constitutional identity, and redefinition as counterfeit continuity. The theory is applied to persons, institutions, ideologies, alliances, and constitutional orders, and it concludes with observational signatures by which the account could be tested or refuted.
Rajendra Wadje (Sat,) studied this question.