This paper establishes a precise mathematical correspondence between quantum stabilizer codes and the morphogenetic stability framework introduced in Sikiru 2026 for binary conflict spaces. We show that the stabilizer basins, Walsh–Fourier eigenmodes, conductance theorem, and morphogenetic Laplacian of that framework are the classical shadows of core quantum-information-theoretic constructs: stabilizer code subspaces, Pauli-Z operators, the quantum Hamming bound, and stabilizer Hamiltonians respectively. The correspondence is exact and bidirectional. In the classical-to-quantum direction, every stabilizer basin BS∼=Qn−k defined by fixing k binary coordinates corresponds to the code subspace of an [n, n − k] quantum stabilizer code, with the basin conductance Φ = k/n providing a classical analogue of the code rate. In the quantum-to-classical direction, every quantum stabilizer code over F2 restricts to a classical stabilizer basin under computational basis projection, with error-correction capability mapping to basin robustness. We exploit this correspondence to import three major quantum results into the classical domain: the quantum threshold theorem (giving conditions under which stable basins exist despite noise), the no-cloning principle (explaining why stable configurations resist unauthorized replication under perturbation), and topological protection from surface codes (providing a new class of maximally robust basins immune to local perturbations). Applications are developed for conflict resolution, AI alignment, and biological morphogenesis, unifying these domains under a single quantum-information-theoretic stability framework. The results open a new research programme connecting quantum error correction, social system stability, and AI safety engineering.
Tajudeen H. Sikiru (Sun,) studied this question.