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🔢 RTT Dimension Map

How systems gain, lose, and flip dimensional access
(Source: current empty file in your tab) github.com


🎯 Purpose#

The Dimension Map shows how RTT‑Tech models:

  • dimensional access
  • dimensional stability
  • dimensional transitions
  • inversion‑driven flips
  • substrate‑specific behavior

Dimensions in RTT‑Tech are functional, not geometric.
They describe how many ways a system can change without breaking.


🔺 Dimensional Access Levels#

RTT uses four practical access levels:

Dimension Meaning Behavior
0D seed / baseline no structure
1D linear single‑axis behavior
2D patterned multi‑axis behavior
3D structural stable coherence

Higher dimensions exist but are not needed for RTT‑Tech fundamentals.


🧩 Dimension Map Diagram#

      3D  (structural)
        ↑
        │   emergence
        │
      2D  (patterned)
        ↑
        │   growth
        │
      1D  (linear)
        ↑
        │   activation
        │
      0D  (seed)

Inversion introduces the collapse → twist → emergence path:

2D → 0D → 3D

🔺 The Dimensional Triad#

Every dimensional event follows the same triad:

1️⃣ Access — what the system can reach
2️⃣ Stability — how long it can hold it
3️⃣ Transition — how it moves between dimensions

This triad is the backbone of RTT dimensional reasoning.


1️⃣ Dimensional Access#

[ D_{\text{access}} = {0D,\ 1D,\ 2D,\ 3D} ]

Access determines the system’s degrees of freedom.


2️⃣ Dimensional Stability#

[ D_{\text{stable}} = f(\text{coherence},\ \text{substrate}) ]

Stability determines how long the system can remain in a dimension.


3️⃣ Dimensional Transition#

[ D_{t+1} = O(D_t) ]

Where O is any RTT operator:

  • Stabilize → holds dimensional access
  • Shift → moves between dimensions
  • Invert → collapses → twists → re‑emerges

🔄 Inversion‑Driven Dimensional Flip#

Inversion is the primary mechanism for dimensional change.

Canonical inversion pattern:#

[ 2D \rightarrow 0D \rightarrow 3D ]

Meaning:

  • collapse removes unstable 2D structure
  • twist reorganizes the substrate
  • emergence produces stable 3D coherence

Inversion is how systems gain new dimensional form.


🔧 Dimensions + Regimes#

Each regime has a characteristic dimensional signature:

Regime Dimensional Behavior
Arrival 0D → 1D
Expansion 1D → 2D
Inversion 2D → 0D → 3D
Coherence stable 3D
Dissolution 3D → 0D

Dimensions are the structural expression of regime transitions.


Dimensions + Coherence#

Dimensional access depends on coherence:

  • high coherence → stable 2D/3D
  • medium coherence → unstable 2D
  • low coherence → 1D
  • collapse → 0D

Equation:
[ C_{t+1} = O(C_t) ]

Coherence determines how much dimension the system can hold.


🧱 Substrate‑Specific Dimensional Behavior#

Physical Substrates#

  • 0D = energy minimum
  • 1D = linear constraint
  • 2D = surface pattern
  • 3D = stable structure

Cognitive Substrates#

  • 0D = pre‑concept
  • 1D = single frame
  • 2D = multi‑frame pattern
  • 3D = integrated understanding

Synthetic Substrates#

  • 0D = empty state
  • 1D = single‑path reasoning
  • 2D = multi‑path patterning
  • 3D = stable, self‑consistent context

The structure is universal; the expression differs.


🧩 Dimension Summary Table#

Dimension Meaning Transition Driver
0D seed activation
1D linear growth
2D patterned collapse or expansion
3D structural emergence

🧭 Design Notes#

This module is intentionally minimal:

  • no geometry
  • no metaphysics
  • no domain‑specific theory

The Dimension Map is a structural diagram, not an explanation.

Updated

Dimension Map — TriadicFrameworks