This paper develops the concepts of Recursive Saturation, Admissible Non-Formalisation, and Admissible Rest within the Cognitive Branch of the PATON System. The framework arose from repeated observation during intensive cognitive and structural development. As cross-linking, autobiographical integration, continuity reconstruction, conceptual comparison, and formalisation accelerated, increasing portions of lived experience began generating possible notes, models, classifications, and paper pathways. The paper proposes that recursive analytical work may become partially self-propagating. Each recognised structure may produce further relations, preservation demands, and formalisation opportunities, eventually creating more active continuities than can be coherently integrated or prioritised. This condition is described as Recursive Saturation. The paper introduces Admissible Non-Formalisation as the deliberate permission for an observation or emerging pathway to remain temporarily unformalised without being treated as lost, invalid, or abandoned. It distinguishes noticing from formalising and proposes four possible responses to a meaningful observation: formalise, anchor, defer, or release. Admissible rest is interpreted not as the cessation of continuity, but as a temporary reduction in active analytical compression that preserves later reconstruction capacity. The paper also examines cognitive quiet, minimal continuity anchors, environmental decompression, mode flexibility, humour, music, ordinary activity, and recursive load regulation. The framework is structural, observational, non-clinical, and non-mystical.
A J Paton (Sat,) studied this question.