This paper develops Relational Continuum Ontology (RCO) as a structural framework for understanding emergence, laws of nature, organized complexity, and the conditions of physical reality. The framework begins from the proposition that existence is ontologically given and intrinsically characterized by generative capacity. The continuous expression of this intrinsic generative capacity constitutes generative relational continuity, from which relations, organizations, and organizational regimes emerge. Within this perspective, stabilization, recurrence, transformation, and reorganization are understood as interconnected processes through which identifiable structures, laws, spatial and temporal order, and physical systems become possible. A minimal formal schema is introduced to clarify the structural relationships among existence, generative capacity, relational organization, stabilization, and law formation. The framework proposes a unified ontological structure through which emergence across physical, biological, and complex systems may be interpreted with greater explanatory coherence and economy.
Rony Moussa (Mon,) studied this question.
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