Panoramica

🎼 01 — Harmonic Stability Profile (HSP)

Definition • Classes • Metrics • Stability Logic#

The Harmonic Stability Profile is the RTT‑native analytic framework used to:

  • classify harmonic stability
  • detect instability and drift
  • map concept‑node coherence
  • evaluate resonance integrity
  • support canon‑level structural decisions

This file defines the core logic of the entire HSP suite.


🔷 1. Purpose of the Harmonic Stability Profile#

The HSP provides:

  • a unified stability model for RTT concepts
  • a classification system for harmonic behavior
  • a metric set for evaluating stability
  • a tier system for interpreting results
  • a foundation for drift detection, echo mapping, and recursion analysis

It is the root analytic layer for the entire directory.


🔷 2. Stability Classes (Overview)#

(Full detail in 01a_HSP_Classes.md)

The HSP defines stability using four canonical classes:

  1. Stable Harmonics — high coherence, low drift
  2. Semi‑Stable Harmonics — partial coherence, moderate drift
  3. Harmonic Oscillators — unstable, high drift
  4. Chaotic Nodes — incoherent, structurally dangerous

Each class corresponds to:

  • a drift sensitivity band
  • a recursion behavior
  • an interval‑specific harmonic signature

🔷 3. Stability Metrics (Overview)#

(Full detail in 01b_HSP_Metrics.md)

The six RTT‑native stability metrics:

  • Harmonic Recurrence
  • Harmonic Position Consistency
  • Substrate Anchoring
  • Operator Role Stability
  • Temporal Stability
  • Harmonic Mutation Rate

These metrics form the analytic backbone of the HSP.


🔷 4. Corpus Stability Map#

(Full detail in 01c_HSP_Corpus_Map.md)

The corpus map shows:

  • where stability is strong
  • where drift is accumulating
  • where recursion is active
  • where echo‑pressure is forming

This is the global diagnostic view of the canon.


🔷 5. Stability Tiers#

(Full detail in 01d_HSP_Stability_Tiers.md)

The HSP uses a four‑tier system:

  • Tier 1 — Canon‑Stable
  • Tier 2 — Stable‑with‑Pressure
  • Tier 3 — Drift‑Active
  • Tier 4 — Unstable / Requires Intervention

Tiers determine:

  • whether a concept is safe
  • whether it needs review
  • whether it requires immediate correction

🔷 6. Interaction With Drift (D1–D4)#

Harmonic stability interacts with drift as follows:

  • D1 destabilizes structural triads
  • D2 collapses harmonic ladders
  • D3 twists governance rules
  • D4 lifts symbolic forms into harmonic/atlas space

The HSP is the first line of detection for all four drift types.


🔷 7. Interaction With Recursion#

Stability determines recursion behavior:

  • stable → ladder
  • semi‑stable → cycle
  • oscillating → map
  • chaotic → atlas‑forcing or collapse

The HSP is the recursion gatekeeper.


🔷 8. Interaction With Substrates#

Each stability class has a substrate signature:

  • Stable → symbolic / harmonic
  • Semi‑stable → cognitive / harmonic
  • Oscillating → social / symbolic
  • Chaotic → atlas / cross‑substrate

The HSP is the substrate alignment tool.


🔷 9. Usage Notes#

Use this file when:

  • evaluating new concepts
  • checking for drift
  • performing canon sweeps
  • analyzing recursion behavior
  • mapping echo pressure
  • preparing stability reports

This is the primary reference for harmonic stability.


🔷 10. Footer#

HSP Module 01 — Loaded
Version: v1.0
Status: Canon-Stable

Updated

01 Harmonic Stability Profile — TriadicFrameworks