Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
This paper examines the relationship between emergent world-formation, irreversible Eigenzeit, and the increasing stabilization dynamics of modern societies. Building on earlier work on process cognition, operatoric world-binding, and the structural incompatibility between emergent and functional modes of organization, the paper develops a perspective in which reality is not understood primarily through stable representation, stored information, or functional reproducibility, but through irreversible processes of relational condensation under conditions of open difference. At the center of the investigation lies the observation that modern societies increasingly translate reality into administratively legible, simulation-based, and statistically reproducible orders. Processes are expected to remain controllable before they can fully unfold. Conflicts are functionally neutralized, difference is reduced, and world is increasingly organized within stabilized informational environments. The paper argues that precisely through these dynamics, those conditions necessary for real emergence, structural reorganization, and long-term world-capability come under increasing pressure. Within this framework, Eigenzeit is understood not merely as subjective time experience, but as the temporal structure of irreversible world-binding itself. World-formation emerges not primarily from stable programs or stored forms, but through recursive processes of condensation, displacement, and metastable reorganization. Emergence therefore does not merely describe the appearance of new properties within already existing systems, but real condition-shift: every condensation irreversibly alters the possibilities of further condensation. The concepts of submergence, indimergence, and emergence, developed by the author in earlier works, do not describe linear developmental phases, but different operatoric aspects of irreversible form-formation. Drawing on long-term autoethnographic research within labor systems, institutional conflicts, artistic research, and recursive theory production, the investigation identifies recurring operatoric invariants that reproduce themselves across different levels of societal reality organization. What becomes visible are conflicts between emergent forms of world-binding and highly stabilized institutional orders that remain primarily dependent on functional legibility, representation, and reversible control. Within this context, neurodivergent or eigenzeit-bound forms of cognition appear not merely as individual deviations, but potentially as historical contact zones in which suppressed conditions of real emergence become visible again. The paper explicitly argues neither for a romanticization of neurodivergence nor for a universal theory of cognition. Its aim is instead the mapping of recursive relational patterns that may point toward deeper tensions within modern forms of reality organization. The paper concludes that the growing conflict between irreversible world-formation and simulation-based stabilization may point toward a broader civilizational crisis: the increasing difficulty of modern societies to continue integrating real difference, open emergence, and long-term world-capability.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Timothy Speed
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Timothy Speed (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a06b95be7dec685947abf86 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20155504
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: