This article presents a critical-propositional analysis of Xuan Zhang’s Cylindrical-Coordinate Geometric Unification: Projection, Quantization, and Fine Structure from Photons to Quarks (2026), published on Zenodo under DOI https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20746151, in dialogue with the Theory of Objectivity (TO). The study examines Zhang’s proposal to derive particles, mass, energy, Planck’s constant, fine-structure constant, spin-1/2, and quark confinement from a conical surface in cylindrical coordinates. The analysis confronts this geometric model with the modal axioms of TO, its phenomenic elements, Inducer Effects, cosmogonic theorem, and cosmological Eras. The article argues that Zhang’s model offers a fertile geometric vocabulary for boundary, projection, quantization, confinement, and radiation, especially when interpreted through TO’s understanding of radiation as transcendent information produced in atomic relations. However, it also identifies tensions concerning modal deduction, dimensional rigor, empirical testability, and the absence of a complete cosmogonic framework. This analytical text received analytical support from ChatGPT. Keywords: Theory of Objectivity; Vidamor Cabannas; Denivaldo Silva; Xuan Zhang; cylindrical-coordinate geometric unification; modal boundary; quantum projection; Planck constant; fine-structure constant; spin-1/2; Berry phase; quark confinement; Inducer Effects; phenomenic elements; transcendent information; radiation; modal cosmogony.
Cabannas et al. (Sun,) studied this question.