This manuscript proposes the Upstream Stabilizing Invariant: a unified structural principle that explains coherence—the capacity for integrated, resilient function—across consciousness, leadership, institutional, biological, and economic systems through three causal mechanisms: identity preservation (operator-theoretic), energetic efficiency (thermodynamic), and information alignment (information-theoretic).Rather than merely observing that coherence correlates across domains, this work establishes causal pathways by which non-coercive, identity-preserving structures enable sustainable coherence and resilience. The invariant is grounded in SCFL (Standard Coherence Fidelity Layer), a substrate-independent measurement framework previously developed for consciousness studies, and is validated through evidence from altered-state consciousness research, leadership team dynamics, institutional crises, biological regeneration, and market stability analysis.The manuscript specifies falsifiability conditions for each mechanism and provides a phased evidence roadmap—observational (complete), quasi-experimental (6-12 months), randomized controlled (18-24 months), and mechanistic (24+ months)—for definitive validation.Most critically, this work bridges theory and practice: formal mechanisms grounded in established physics and dynamical systems theory are paired with operational guidance enabling practitioners to measure coherence and implement non-coercive structures across any domain. An appendix provides preliminary empirical validations demonstrating the three mechanisms operate in real systems as predicted.The invariant, if validated, represents a profound unification: what appears as separate phenomena (individual clarity, team cohesion, institutional resilience, biological regeneration) would be revealed as instances of a single universal principle operating at different scales.
Ronald Brogdon (Tue,) studied this question.