GT — The Three Phases of Structure Formation presents the foundational architecture of Generative Theory (GT), describing how all structure emerges through a three‑phase continuum: Generativity, Pulsation, and Evolution. These phases explain the transition from pre‑structural activity to fully stable, measurable behaviour. The article defines Generativity as the pre‑physical and pre‑mathematical activity that producesthe possibility of structure. Pulsation is introduced as the transitional threshold where the first proto‑cycles and proto‑stabilities appear, marking the beginning of repeatability. Evolution begins only after the first stable configuration (01) is formed, enabling invariants, symmetry, compressibility, and the mathematical and physical descriptions used in science. The three‑phase model clarifies why mathematics and physics operate exclusively in the evolutionary domain and cannot describe the generative origin of structure. The article also highlights parallels between GT and known physical phenomena, such as pulsars and the Big Bang, which can be interpretedas evolutionary echoes of generative processes. This publication provides a concise and rigorous foundation for understanding how structure arises from minimal generative relations, forming the conceptual core of GT. Author: Waldemar Superson
Waldemar Superson (Sat,) studied this question.