TriadicFrameworks — Triadic Diagrams Index#
triadic_module.json— Agentic module schema role assignments
A Living Atlas of Regime, Ontology, and Substrate Interactions#
The Triadic Diagrams are the canonical visualization layer of TriadicFrameworks.
Each diagram is a standalone artifact and a member of a growing lineage, expressing one facet of the architecture through a precise metaphor: optical, geometric, temporal, celestial, mechanical, or multidimensional.
This folder serves as the navigation surface for that lineage — a triadic atlas that orients readers across the expanding canon.
Purpose of This Folder#
The /docs/triadic/ directory contains:
- Foundational triadic diagrams (SO / ISO / LACTOS interactions)
- Regime‑layer instruments (RTT, vST, S–N–R, VCG, TCR)
- Multidimensional metaphors (3D, 4D, 6D, temporal, celestial)
- Meta‑instruments (orientation, timekeeping, rotation, position, celestial mapping, orbital dynamics)
- High‑order conceptual tools that help readers see the architecture rather than merely read about it
Each diagram is written as a self‑contained conceptual instrument, but together they form a coherent cartographic system.
How to Use This Atlas#
- Start with the early diagrams if you want grounding in the core triadic relationships.
- Move into the regime‑layer instruments to understand how RTT, vST, and S–N–R shape interpretation.
- Explore the multidimensional diagrams to see how the architecture behaves in 3D, 4D, 6D, and beyond.
- Use the meta‑instruments (Compass, Chronometer, Gyroscope, Sextant, Astrolabe, Orrery) to orient yourself across the entire conceptual universe.
- Treat each diagram as a navigational tool, not a static picture — each one reveals a different invariant.
Index of Triadic Diagrams#
Below is a clean, navigable index.
As you add new diagrams, simply extend the list — the atlas grows with the canon.
Foundational Diagrams#
TF_regime_tesseract_navigator.md— Traversing cross‑ontology transformations in 4DTF_regime_hypercube.md— 4D structural model of cross‑ontology interactionsTF_regime_phase_space_observatory.md— Visualizing cross‑ontology dynamics in 6D
Optical & Field‑Based Instruments#
TF_regime_polarimeter.md— Measuring orientation and spin across ontology framesTF_regime_tomograph.md— Reconstructing cross‑ontology structure through layered slicesTF_regime_holographer.md— Encoding full‑volume ontology structure into interference patternsTF_regime_volumetric_interferometer.md— Cross‑ontology phase mapping in 3D space
Cartographic & Atlas‑Scale Instruments#
TF_regime_hyper_atlas.md— Mapping the entire multidimensional architectureTF_regime_chrono_topograph.md— Mapping time‑layered transformations across the architecture
Meta‑Instruments (Orientation, Time, Rotation, Position)#
TF_regime_meta_compass.md— Orienting navigation across all layersTF_regime_meta_chronometer.md— Measuring time across all layersTF_regime_meta_gyroscope.md— Stabilizing rotation across all layersTF_regime_meta_sextant.md— Measuring position across dimensional and ontological horizons
Celestial & Orbital Instruments#
TF_regime_meta_astrolabe.md— Charting celestial‑scale relationshipsTF_regime_meta_orrery.md— Modeling orbital dynamics of regimes and ontologies
Philosophy of the Triadic Diagrams#
Every diagram in this folder follows three principles:
1. Structure Before Explanation#
The diagram is the explanation.
Text only clarifies what the structure already reveals.
2. Artifact Lineage#
Each diagram is part of a living canon —
a sequence of conceptual instruments that evolve together.
3. Regime Literacy#
The diagrams train the reader to perceive:
- regime boundaries
- ontology transformations
- substrate invariants
- observer‑layer corrections
- compute‑layer stabilizations
This is not decoration — it is pedagogy.
Contributing to the Triadic Atlas#
When adding a new diagram:
- Give it a clear, instrument‑like name
- Place it in this folder with the prefix
TF_ - Add it to the index above
- Maintain the lineage: each diagram should extend the canon, not repeat it
The atlas grows through coherent expansion, not accumulation.