Abstract Communication systems across human history exhibit recurring structural transitions in how meaning propagates through societies. Early systems rely on local signaling, later systems introduce symbolic abstraction, and mature systems eventually transition toward contextual or environmental coordination mechanisms. This paper formalizes a recurring evolutionary pattern in communication infrastructures: order → scaling → saturation → structural break → new coordination layer. The model is illustrated through historical transitions from speech to writing, printing, digital networks, and emerging ambient computing systems. These transitions are mapped onto the ACE progression used in the Ambient Era Canon (∅ → 1 → 0 → 1≠0 → 2 → α → Ω). Within this framework, the symbolic internet represents a saturation phase characterized by high decoding entropy and attention fragmentation, while ambient systems represent a structural transition toward environmental coordination. The paper further proposes chromatic semantic vectors as a candidate low-entropy semantic substrate capable of bridging human perception, machine vector representations, and environmental signaling systems. This model suggests that communication infrastructures may be entering a phase in which meaning is embedded within shared environmental states rather than transmitted primarily through symbolic interfaces.
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Raynor Eissens
Ambient Systems (Netherlands)
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Raynor Eissens (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69aa70f8531e4c4a9ff5b362 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18860092
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