This methodological origin paper documents how the Structural Fingerprint Method emerged within the PATON System. Its cognitive origin lay in Andrew John Paton’s recurring practice of approaching difficult problems from alternative structural directions whenever accepted framings proved insufficient. This practice was described as thinking “sideways from left of Monday.” The PATON System initially developed outward from recursive and multi-angle cognition into scientific, engineering, philosophical, organisational, and other external domains. It later turned inward through the Cognitive Branch, allowing the framework to examine aspects of the cognition from which it had emerged. The methodological spark occurred when multiple Cognitive Branch papers began overlapping in structural constancy. Different observations repeatedly exposed common relations involving boundary, relation, weighting, pressure, persistence, interruption, redistribution, reconfiguration, admissibility, and continuity through change. This recurrence suggested that a lowest common denominator could be combined with natural attributes and translated into a mathematical “living equation” capable of representing changing and continuing systems. The resulting methodological lineage was: PFA recognises the fingerprint. PLM examines what holds it. AIT tests what remains possible and admissible. RCG maps how it can continue through change. SFM operationalises the complete structural analysis. The paper is autobiographical and methodological. It preserves the actual pathway through which SFM emerged without claiming that structural similarity proves physical equivalence or that SFM replaces established domain-specific methods. The paper concludes with the song “Left of Monday,” which was constructed directly from the thinking process described in the paper.
A J Paton (Sun,) studied this question.