This work introduces a novel theoretical framework, Closure Logic, to investigate the logical structural conditions that underlie the possibility of definition, distinction, and relation in reality. Challenging the traditional tendency to begin inquiry with empirical or physical contents, this book posits that "reality" is the resultant outcome of an underlying logical architecture rather than its starting point. By adopting a methodology of system diagnosis, the text explores how the logical co…
Read moreThis work introduces a novel theoretical framework, Closure Logic, to investigate the logical structural conditions that underlie the possibility of definition, distinction, and relation in reality. Challenging the traditional tendency to begin inquiry with empirical or physical contents, this book posits that "reality" is the resultant outcome of an underlying logical architecture rather than its starting point. By adopting a methodology of system diagnosis, the text explores how the logical constraints of singularity and wholeness necessitate specific modes of description, identifying a fundamental duality between "whole" and "fractional" description. Through an analysis of the "3-body problem" in a logical context, the work demonstrates how distributed relational expectations prevent terminal closure, thereby preserving the openness essential for structural legibility. The resulting model, the "omnisphere," maps the dynamics of synchrony and interaction under structural constraint. Ultimately, this inquiry offers a rigorous tool for understanding the conditions under which any phenomenon can be described, moving beyond empirical physics to define the generative mechanisms of intelligibility itself.