This paper introduces the Observation → Continuation Principle within the Paton System. The principle states that recursive system persistence requires the observational registration of admissible states. While admissibility determines which states are permitted to exist within a system, continuation across time requires those states to be registered within the observation interface. The paper clarifies the structural relationship between Tier-4 observation and Tier-5 recursive continuation within the Paton System architecture. Admissibility determines structural permission, observation registers admissible states, and continuation produces persistent system histories through recursive compatibility across successive states. The principle is expressed formally as: Continuation(s) ⇒ Observed(s) and conversely: ¬Observed(s) ⇒ ¬Continuation(s) Observation therefore functions as the structural reference through which recursive continuation becomes possible. Without observational registration, recursive persistence cannot occur because no sequence of states exists upon which continuation can operate. Cross-domain examples from physics, computation, biology, and cognition illustrate how persistent systems require the registration of admissible states before continuation across time can occur. Together with the Admissibility → Observation Theorem, this principle establishes the minimal structural persistence pipeline within the Paton System: Admissibility → Observation → Continuation.
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Andrew John Paton
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Andrew John Paton (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b3acd302a1e69014ccee3b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18956255