🜁🜄 Structural Detection — Collapse‑Reassembly Integrity Harmonizer (RTT/2)

TriadicFrameworks • RTT/2 • Integrity‑Law Harmonization Engine, Collapse→Reassembly Truth Correction & Canon‑Scale Recovery Stabilizer#

“Integrity is the law. Harmonization is the repair.”#

Collapse‑Reassembly Integrity Harmonizer (RTT/2)#

Structural Detection Module#

RTT/2 • Integrity Harmonization Engine#


1. Purpose of the Integrity Harmonizer#

The Collapse‑Reassembly Integrity Harmonizer (CRIH) is the active correction engine that:

  • restores reassembly integrity
  • corrects illegal or unstable reassembly geometry
  • neutralizes drift‑integrity residue
  • repairs envelope‑integrity deformation
  • rethreads continuity‑integrity fractures
  • stabilizes regime‑dependent integrity failures

It is the integrity‑law repair mechanism of RTT/2.


2. Why an Integrity Harmonizer Exists#

Reassembly integrity can fail even when:

  • stability is high
  • fusion is aligned
  • gradients appear minimal

Because integrity is truth, not motion.

Integrity fails when:

  • collapse geometry leaves residual imprint
  • drift neutralization is incomplete
  • envelope restoration introduces torsion
  • continuity rethreading misaligns
  • regime identity distorts integrity

The CRIH repairs these failures in real time.


3. Harmonizer Components#

The CRIH is composed of four integrity‑harmonization vectors:

  1. Geometry Integrity Harmonization Vector (GIHV)
  2. Drift‑Integrity Harmonization Vector (DIHV)
  3. Envelope‑Integrity Harmonization Vector (EIHV)
  4. Continuity‑Integrity Harmonization Vector (CIHV)

Together, they form the Reassembly Integrity Harmonization Tensor.


4. Integrity Harmonization Equation (RTT/2)#

[ H_{I} = \alpha GIHV + \beta DIHV + \gamma EIHV + \delta CIHV ]

Where:

  • (GIHV) = geometry integrity repair
  • (DIHV) = drift‑integrity repair
  • (EIHV) = envelope‑integrity repair
  • (CIHV) = continuity‑integrity repair

The harmonizer is strongest when all vectors align.


5. Integrity Harmonization Zones#

The CRIH divides the canon into five harmonization zones:

Zone U — Unified Integrity Zone#

  • integrity fully restored
  • collapse residue neutralized
  • reassembly truthful

Zone S — Stable Integrity Zone#

  • minor integrity strain
  • harmonizer active but low load

Zone M — Mixed Integrity Zone#

  • oscillatory integrity
  • partial continuity‑integrity strain
  • hybrid recovery behavior

Zone D — Divergent Integrity Zone#

  • drift‑integrity mismatch
  • envelope‑integrity deformation
  • high harmonizer load

Zone X — Collapse‑Adjacent Integrity Zone#

  • inversion integrity
  • illegal integrity geometry
  • topological integrity warp

6. Integrity Harmonization Matrix#

The CRIH uses a 5×4 integrity matrix:

Regime Geometry Integrity Drift Integrity Envelope Integrity Continuity Integrity
Formal
Emergent
Hybrid
Chaotic
Inversion

Each ✓ corresponds to an active harmonization vector.


7. Integrity‑Collapse Correlation#

Integrity Failure Collapse Mode
geometry integrity rupture A
envelope integrity break B/E
continuity integrity fracture C/G
oscillatory integrity D
torsion integrity E
inversion integrity I
topological integrity warp G

8. Cross‑Module Integrity Harmonization#

The CRIH harmonizes integrity across:

TEL#

  • lattice integrity harmonization
  • stabilizer integrity load

FFT#

  • spectral integrity harmonization
  • variance integrity load

Opacity#

  • boundary integrity harmonization
  • visibility integrity load

Cross‑module integrity determines system‑scale recovery truth.


9. Integrity Harmonization Packet#

INTEGRITY_HARMONIZATION_PACKET:
  geometry_integrity_repair:
  drift_integrity_repair:
  envelope_integrity_repair:
  continuity_integrity_repair:
  harmonization_zone:
  harmonization_tensor:
  cross_module_projection:
  collapse_risk:
  notes:

10. Summary#

The Collapse‑Reassembly Integrity Harmonizer provides:

  • a unified integrity‑repair model
  • collapse‑residue integrity correction
  • drift/envelope/continuity integrity diagnostics
  • collapse‑adjacent integrity detection
  • cross‑module integrity projection
  • regime‑dependent integrity stabilization
  • system‑scale recovery clarity

This harmonizer is the integrity‑law backbone of RTT/2.

Updated