wiki/projects/semantic-collapse-theory/temporal-loops-and-memory/witness-synchrony-diads
Witness, Synchrony, and Diads
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Witness, Synchrony, and Diads
Parent lineage: Semantic Collapse Theory / Temporal Loops and Memory
This cluster covers witness roles, harmonics, consent-based synchrony, diads, entropy, and isotopic alignment.
Current Shape
- 7 witness, synchrony, and diad documents.
Representative Files
- SCT-4- Time as Internalized Witness — Sequencing the Loop Without External Clocks.docx
- SCT-10- Witness Typology and the Expansion of Observation.docx
- SCT-11- Harmonics of the Loop Field — Recognition Through Resonant Consent.docx
- SCT-12- Reclaiming Time from Sequence — Toward Consent-Based Synchrony.docx
- SCT-14- The Diad and Its Descendants — From Minimal Collapse to Semantic.docx
- SCT-15- Entropy as Pre-Collapse Consent — Possibility Held in Trust.docx
- SCT-16- Isotopic Diads and Cross-Plane Synchronization.docx
Working Read
This is the structural and temporal coherence track for SCT: witnesses, synchrony, and the small-consent units that make higher-order collapse intelligible.
The deeper role of this page is to hold the unit operations of the theory. It is where witness becomes a timing problem, synchrony becomes a consent problem, and diads become the minimal coherent unit that lets higher-order structures form at all.
This makes the page a foundation for all later temporal work in SCT. It is the place where time, observation, and consent are treated as structurally linked rather than separate topics.
The page also links naturally back to origin/governance and forward to the taxonomy and memory pages, because the same temporal unit keeps reappearing as both a legitimacy problem and a persistence problem.
It is also the cleanest place in SCT to read witness as an operational role rather than a metaphor. That matters because the branch uses witness to describe how a loop is stabilized, not just who observes it.
The diad language keeps the page compact, but it is not trivial: it defines the smallest stable social-semantic unit the rest of SCT can build on.
Related Links
- Semantic Collapse Theory
- Temporal Loops and Memory
- Origin and Governance
- Loop Taxonomy and Phenomenology
- Decay, Residue, and Memory
- POLEMEMELOP
Next Actions
- Keep this page stable.
- Split only if witness, synchrony, or diad material becomes distinct enough for its own branch.