Acknowledgement The author is grateful to Julian Barbour for generous personal correspondence that helped clarify the distinction between cosmological models and structural principles. His engagement sharpened the modal character of this theory: the principle concerns the coherent possibility of certain closed cyclical structures, not claims about the physical universe. The author is grateful to Jonathan Schaffer for generous correspondence on grounding theory. It should be noted that the present paper does not stand in contradiction to Schaffer's work, nor does it seek to propose an alternative axiomatization of grounding. The cyclical hierarchies formalized here concern abstract dependency structures satisfying fixed-point conditions; they do not address the relationship between wholes and parts that is central to priority monism. Schaffer's observation that asymmetry is an axiom within grounding theory is fully compatible with our results, which operate in a different domain: the mathematical characterization of self-sufficient structures, without any claim that metaphysical grounding relations should or should not be asymmetric. Dedication This paper is dedicated to Julian Barbour, Nick Bostrom, and Stephen Hawking, whose ideas influenced my intellectual path over three decades and ultimately led to this work. Engaging with their thought made it possible to look back across twenty-five centuries of human wisdom without reverence for inherited certainties, yet with deep respect for the courage of those who first dared to think differently. Their influence helped shape a perspective in which the oldest questions are not merely answered, but re-examined in light of structure, limits, and possibility. Overview This paper explores the possibility of cyclical hierarchical systems—structures in which the hierarchy of foundations is closed rather than grounded in a first element. The central thesis is modal: such structures are coherently possible, and for them, the demand for a primary foundation may constitute a conceptual mismatch—akin to asking what is north of the North Pole. The paper provides rigorous mathematical conditions for cyclical closure using fixed-point theorems (Knaster-Tarski, Banach, Brouwer) and topological characterization via homology. A foundational hierarchy is formally defined as a triple (S, ≤, F), and cyclical closure is shown equivalent to fixed-point existence for the composite operator. Essential cyclicity is characterized by non-trivial first homology H₁(X; ℤ) ≠ 0, ensuring the cycle cannot be continuously contracted to a point. Key Contributions The Tripartite Distinction Source (Quelle), Foundation (Grund), and Primacy (Priorität)—conflated in linear models—are shown to diverge in cyclical structures. A may be the source of B while B is the foundation of A; primacy circulates rather than inhering in any element. Mathematical Framework Rigorous definitions and theorems establish existence conditions for cyclically closed hierarchies. The framework includes formal proofs and explicit statements of what the theorems do and do not establish. Key results include: • Proposition 5.4: Fixed-point equivalence with proof • Theorems 5.5, 5.7, 5.9: Knaster-Tarski, Banach, Brouwer conditions • Proposition 5.13: Essential cyclicity via homology • Proposition 5.16: Quantum states application with proof Conceptual Mismatch Analysis Building on Ryle's category error analysis, the paper argues that foundational questions applied to closed structures may be dissolved rather than answered—they presuppose structural features (fixed endpoints, linear ordering) that such systems lack. This claim is presented as a philosophical interpretation, not as a demonstrated logical necessity. Applications (with Epistemic Grading) Mutual Simulation Without Base Reality The simulation hypothesis (Bostrom, 2003) assumes linear hierarchy requiring base reality. Cyclical hierarchy demonstrates formal coherence of cyclic mutual simulation. Wolpert (2025) provides mathematical framework. The demand for "base reality" is revealed as presupposition, not logical requirement. Status: Formal coherence demonstrated; actuality not claimed. Artificial Intelligence Analysis of cyclical mutual constitution in multi-agent systems where AI systems recursively refine each other. Formal conditions for fixed-point existence (contraction on complete metric space) are explicitly stated, with acknowledgment that whether actual AI systems satisfy these conditions is an empirical question. Status: Speculative but formally grounded. Candidate Instantiations (Graded by Epistemic Status) Strict Instantiations (Formal Systems) Recursive function definitions via fixed-point combinators; self-interpreting interpreters; corecursive data structures. Strong Biological Candidates Autopoiesis (Maturana metabolic cycles as fixed-point equations. Caveat: These illustrate structural closure in ongoing organization, not absence of phylogenetic origin. Physical Analogies Wheeler-DeWitt equation (atemporal formulation); TQFT (topology-first modeling); emergent spacetime from entanglement (Van Raamsdonk, Ryu-Takayanagi). Status: These show physics permits atemporal formulations; they do not establish metaphysical claims. Central Result Self-sufficient systems are coherently possible when the hierarchy of their foundations is closed and atemporal, structural functions satisfy fixed-point existence conditions, and the configuration space is topologically compact with non-trivial first homology. In such systems, a primary foundation is not absent but may be inadmissible: a conceptual mismatch arising from applying linear concepts to non-linear structure. Appendix Historical Development of Cyclical Structural Thinking: The Trinity as a historical example of cyclical hierarchical thinking in Western intellectual history (presented for illustrative purposes only, not as part of the scientific argument).
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Boris Kriger
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Boris Kriger (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6971be50642b1836717e2fea — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18317628