This working paper presents the theoretical foundations of the Inner Human Architecture™ framework, a conceptual architecture proposing that the stability, coherence, and emergent quality of human systems are functions of the internal maturity of the individuals who compose them. The framework integrates four interconnected theories: the Unified Human Systems Theory, the Distributed Human Coherence Theory, the Emergent Human Systems Theory, and the Centerless Human Systems Theory. Background:Human systems are consistently organised around centralised control structures, while the internal architecture of the human beings composing those systems is rarely examined as a primary explanatory variable in systemic stability and fragmentation. Objective:This work develops a unified theoretical framework linking individual internal architecture to systemic coherence, emergence, and centerless structural stability. Method:The work employs conceptual theoretical analysis grounded in the foundational axiom of internal primacy. The framework develops six structural laws, a formal causal sequence, a stability threshold model, and the Ω Terminus construct. Findings:The framework proposes that systemic coherence, structural stability, and emergent human quality arise primarily from the distributed internal maturity of participating individuals rather than from external control mechanisms alone. Conclusions:Within this framework, sustainable systemic transformation begins through the development of internal human architecture rather than through structural redesign alone.
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Adrian Iacob
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Adrian Iacob (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fecf49b9154b0b828764c4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20060576