Identity, Persistence, and Perturbation is a position paper within the Scalar Drag Emergence Framework (SDEF) that examines how organized structures maintain continuity despite continual change. The paper develops a cross-domain ontology of identity, structural memory, ancestry, persistence, resilience, and metastability. Rather than treating these concepts as domain-specific physical mechanisms, they are interpreted as organizational principles that appear across quantum, chemical, biological, planetary, stellar, galactic, and cosmological regimes. The central thesis is that persistence does not arise from permanence of constituents. Instead, persistence emerges through the preservation of structural memory despite continual exchange, perturbation, reconstruction, and adaptation. Identity is therefore interpreted as a process of organizational continuity rather than material continuity. Within this perspective, ancestry represents retained organizational influence from prior states, while resilience and metastability emerge as consequences of successful persistence under perturbation. The framework proposes that organized structures remain recognizable not because they avoid change, but because they continuously reconstruct coherence while preserving sufficient structural memory to maintain continuity. This work is presented as a conceptual and ontological paper rather than a formal derivation. Its purpose is to articulate a cross-domain interpretation of persistence and identity applicable across diverse organizational regimes.
Pej Evan Bartolo (Tue,) studied this question.
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