Dimensionality is commonly treated as a fixed property of the world—a pre‑existing container in which physical systems unfold. This paper argues the opposite: dimensionality is an emergent artifact generated by systems that must preserve coherence across irreducible variation. A system produces dimensions when its internal or external modes of variation cannot be compressed into fewer degrees of freedom without loss of identity. This framework unifies physical, cognitive, and collective domains by treating dimensionality as the minimal structure required to stabilize relational patterns. Physical systems generate spatial dimensions to maintain interactional coherence; cognitive systems generate conceptual dimensions to maintain representational coherence; and social systems generate shared dimensional artifacts to maintain collective coherence. Dimensionality is therefore not a universal backdrop but a dynamic, generative interface that arises whenever a system must track, organize, and preserve distinguishable structure through time.
Denis Bailey (Mon,) studied this question.