This work presents ten cross-domain structural paradoxes analyzed under the Structuristics / CAMAF framework. Although initially written as illustrative cases, the collection progressively converged toward a broader hypothesis: that observation, decomposition, and representation may share common structural limits across physics, cognition, communication, artificial intelligence, epistemology, and social systems. The central operational idea is that every act of representation implies a decompositional process. Under certain conditions, recursive decomposition encounters structural limits where information, coherence, or reconstructability cannot be fully preserved. Rather than treating these effects as isolated domain-specific anomalies, the text explores the possibility that they represent manifestations of a common structural phenomenon. The ten cases include: recursive self-reference and consciousness, quantum measurement and delayed-choice interpretation, observer-dependent reconstruction, information loss under projection, structural limits in communication, epistemic masking in AI systems, decompositional collapse, and the distinction between observable representation and underlying structure. A recurring hypothesis throughout the document is that some paradoxes traditionally treated as ontologically independent may instead emerge from constraints imposed by decompositional integrity, recursive observation, and representational thresholds. Importantly, the work does not claim to provide finalized physical theories or empirical proof for all interpretations presented. Many sections are explicitly framed as interpretative or exploratory. The objective is instead to establish a structurally consistent research program capable of generating falsifiable hypotheses across multiple domains. Although several concepts are formalized using the operators C (construction) and D (decomposition), the document should not be interpreted as a complete theory of intelligence, consciousness, or physics. Rather, it proposes that recursive construction/decomposition dynamics may constitute a shared invariant underlying phenomena that are usually studied separately. The document is also historically relevant within the development of the Structuristics/FPI/CAMAF ecosystem because it contains early formulations of ideas later expanded into: decompositional integrity (ID), recursive structural boundaries, structural regime transitions, observer-dependent reconstruction, and consciousness as a recursive boundary condition. Originally drafted as a limited exploratory exercise “for fun,” the text later revealed unexpected conceptual convergence between independent domains, motivating its preservation as part of the historical development of the framework. This archive is preserved primarily for: conceptual traceability, chronological precedence of hypotheses, framework archaeology, and future comparative analysis of the evolution of the Structuristics research program.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Alexsandro Moura
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Alexsandro Moura (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a02c394ce8c8c81e9640fa6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20102285
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: