Reality has been characterized across diverse philosophical and spiritual traditions. Despite several interpretations that may attempt to reduce reality’s nature to manageable pieces, its nature remains fundamentally undulating, non-teleological, and beyond exhaustive human interpretation. This paper introduces Ambiflux, a transdisciplinary architecture that situates human orientation within structural fluidity and context-dependent meaning-making. Unlike frameworks that address ontological char…
Read moreReality has been characterized across diverse philosophical and spiritual traditions. Despite several interpretations that may attempt to reduce reality’s nature to manageable pieces, its nature remains fundamentally undulating, non-teleological, and beyond exhaustive human interpretation. This paper introduces Ambiflux, a transdisciplinary architecture that situates human orientation within structural fluidity and context-dependent meaning-making. Unlike frameworks that address ontological character, epistemological consequences, or required postures in isolation, Ambiflux provides an integrated structure that functions across these three levels simultaneously. This internal logic establishes load-bearing relationships between the nature of reality and the human response. Ambiflux enriches contemporary theory by conceptualizing reality as a perpetual Becoming and by providing a name for the conditions that historical traditions have long pointed towards. The framework asserts the fundamental unanswerability of a reality defined by constant movement, suggesting that the appropriate relationship to this condition is not mere observation but active inhabitation. The Silent Witness emerges as a psychospiritual posture, a meditative presence that represents the full inhabitation of movement without the resistance of artificial stasis. By treating perennial claims as living realities, Ambiflux fosters a transdisciplinary development that navigates perpetual change without seeking manageable end states.