This paper presents a plain-language synthesis of a four-paper mathematical series establishing that geometric description is not a fundamental given but a regime-dependent property of relational organization. The central finding is that a relational system supports coherent geometry if and only if the spectral gap of its weighted graph Laplacian remains strictly positive — and that this condition can fail while topological connectivity is preserved. Two distinct dynamical mechanisms of geometric failure are identified: global degradation, which produces smooth spectral collapse with preserved eigenstructure, and localized overload, which produces rapid collapse with strong eigenvector localization. Each mechanism leaves a different structural signature in the post-geometric regime. Post-geometric states are not structurally empty — relational organization persists beyond the admissibility boundary in forms that geometry cannot describe but that retain connectivity, dynamical activity, and organized structure. These results support a view of geometric spacetime as a phase of relational organization rather than a fundamental background structure, with implications for the interpretation of singularities, the relationship between general relativity and quantum mechanics, and the foundations of spacetime ontology. The paper is written for readers in philosophy of physics, foundations of physics, and mathematical physics without assuming specialist background in spectral graph theory.
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Matthew Lehman
University of Wisconsin–Green Bay
University of Wisconsin–Green Bay
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Matthew Lehman (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0567fda550a87e60a20561 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20148023