This work develops a structural foundation of the concepts of order, instantiation, and space based on the assumptions introduced in Paper 1 and Paper 2. Its aim is not to construct a physical model, but to provide a conceptual clarification of those conditions under which determinacy, relation, and structure can be meaningfully articulated. Instantiation is not understood as a temporal process, but as the logical fixation of a closed state of order. Order functions as the precondition of relational determinability, while space is not conceived as a physical entity but as the relational determinacy of instantiated order. Time remains ontologically presupposed and physically effective; however, its articulation as a distinguishable structure arises only within the framework of instantiated order. The paper is intended as a conceptual foundation for further model-building, without introducing dynamic or causal explanations or modifying existing ontological assumptions.
Enrico Johne (Sun,) studied this question.