The E=mc Thought Principle (E = mcηρᵢ lnI + Δ) has been presented as a conceptualframework for describing the dynamic processes through which thought isgenerated, transformed, and collapsed. It is not, however, a universal theoryapplicable to all phenomena that bear on thought. This paper pursues twoobjectives. First, it repositions the domain in which the principle does not operate —static singularities — not as territory beyond the principle's reach but as the zeropoint at which E converges to zero within the principle's own descriptive space.Second, it introduces the concept of pseudo-static singularities: structures that arenot absolutely static but behave as locally approximate E ≈ 0 conditions withinparticular observational contexts and timescales. By describing the conditions thatmaintain closure and the conditions under which closure breaks down, the paperprovides a theoretical basis for the transition from static to dynamic process. Namingthe zero point is not an admission of limitation. As Gödel's incompleteness theoremsstrengthened the whole of formal logic by demonstrating what lies outside any givenformal system, naming the zero point sharpens the descriptive honesty of theprinciple and, in doing so, retroactively illuminates the ontological weight of Δ.
Katsutoshi Mayumi (Tue,) studied this question.
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