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This paper develops a coherence-based reconstruction of the role of the symmetric group S₃ in gauge differentiation, mass hierarchy, and internal closure structure. Rather than treating S₃ merely as the permutation group of three objects, we interpret it as the minimal finite grammar of triadic asymmetry: the first algebraic structure in which cyclic coherence, pairwise reversal, orientation, and noncommutative exchange coexist. The paper distinguishes completed spatial closure from internal gauge asymmetry. In infratier closure physics, SO (3) is associated with completed 3. 0D spatial rotational closure, while S₃ acts on the residual and infratier asymmetry side of the architecture. The gauge structures U (1), SU (2), and SU (3) are therefore not treated as ordinary spatial symmetries, but as internal closure completions of phase-curvature, torsional, and confinement asymmetry sectors. A closure-completion operator is introduced to clarify how finite S₃-organized asymmetry cuts may stabilize as continuous gauge structures. Special attention is given to the SU (3) case, where the Weyl group relation W (SU (3) ) ≅S₃ provides a rigorous bridge between finite triadic asymmetry and the A₂ root system. The eight-generator structure of su (3) is interpreted as 6+2: six S₃-organized exchange roots plus two trace-zero balance axes. The resulting framework preserves the mathematical distinction between finite permutation groups, spatial rotation groups, and continuous Lie gauge groups, while explaining why triadic asymmetry appears at the root of gauge differentiation and mass emergence.
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Philip Lilien
University Foundation
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Philip Lilien (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a06b8f8e7dec685947ab8c4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20171376