Contemporary research across physics, biology, cognition, computation, metaphysics, social theory, and theology is increasingly oriented toward the same structural questions: how relational processes generate coherent organization, how systems maintain identity while transforming, and what minimal mechanisms account for emergence across scales. This paper examines fourteen influential authors whose work defines the current frontier in their respective fields and extracts the explicit research questions they pose. Without synthesizing their theories or imposing external categories, the analysis shows that these questions converge on a shared operator‑level structure. The Unified Generative Architecture (UGA)—comprising relational primitives, generative transformations, and constraint architectures—provides the minimal mechanism required to answer these questions without distortion. The result is a cross‑domain convergence that clarifies the structural continuity underlying contemporary accounts of emergence and offers a unified framework capable of guiding future research across the sciences, humanities, and theology.
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Analyzing shared references across papers
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Denis Bailey
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Analyzing shared references across papers
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Denis Bailey (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69bf89a9f665edcd009e989b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19140083