Complex System Theory Geometry of Power: Complex System Theory — Foundation Triad: Origin, Conflict, and Emergence presents a unified theoretical framework for describing how complex systems arise, destabilize, and transform. The work integrates three connected modules — the Theory of Origin, the Theory of Conflict, and the Theory of Emergence — into a single analytical architecture linking distinction, boundary formation, structural tension, historical trace, and dimensional transition. The project is organized around five interconnected components. Zero Principle introduces structural uncertainty as an ontological condition: wherever multiple independent axes of distinction coexist, an unresolved region necessarily emerges. In this sense, uncertainty is treated not as ignorance, noise, or incomplete measurement, but as a structural feature of reality. Theory of Origin develops a generative account of system formation beginning from the undifferentiated state. It describes how distinction gives rise to boundary, geometry, operational time, trace, field, and stabilized material structure. Within this framework, time is understood as the internal ordering of transformation, while matter is interpreted as the stabilized persistence of accumulated systemic trace. Theory of Conflict examines the instability of binary organization. It argues that a two-axis system cannot fully stabilize from within its own dimensional closure. As a result, binary structures accumulate tension over time, spiral toward an elastic threshold, and confront a limit condition that cannot be resolved through in-plane adjustment alone. Conflict is therefore treated not as accidental disorder, but as the lawful expression of binary insufficiency. Theory of Emergence defines the formal transition from binary organization to ternary organization. When structural tension reaches its critical threshold without total rupture, the system may generate a new axis that reconfigures accumulated trace into a higher-order architecture. Emergence is thus interpreted not as creation ex nihilo, but as dimensional extension under structural necessity. Time completes the framework by situating the Triad within a layered account of temporal structure. The project distinguishes between different modes of time and treats the full Triad as a staged manifestation of structural transformation through time. Together, these components form the conceptual basis of System Transition Theory (STT) and the broader Geometry of Power corpus. Related works: Zero Principle: DOI 10.5281/zenodo.19037162 STT Corpus: DOI 10.5281/zenodo.18967479 STT Transition: DOI 10.5281/zenodo.19063794
ANDREY STANKO (Sat,) studied this question.