Goal #2 — Transporter Integration Map
Summary#
Transporters sit between Replicators (Goal #1) and CTs (Goal #3).
They are the continuity bridge that allows identity to move across substrates without collapse, drift, or duplication.
This map shows how transporters integrate with:
- the triadic identity kernel
- the 1% asymmetry functional
- replicator and CT operators
- arrival substrate
- lostational geometry
1. Transporter Position in the Continuity Stack#
Replicators (Goal #1)
|
| (identity preserved)
v
Transporters (Goal #2)
|
| (identity + environment preserved)
v
CTs / Virtual Worlds (Goal #3)
Transporters are the middle operator:
- Replicators preserve identity + blueprint
- CTs preserve identity + environment
- Transporters preserve identity across substrates
2. Transporter Inputs and Outputs#
Input#
- Triad $$T$$
- Asymmetry $$A(T)=0.01$$
- Source substrate $$S_1$$
Output#
- Triad $$T'$$ (must equal $$T$$ )
- Asymmetry preserved
- Target substrate $$S_2$$
3. Integration with Replicators#
Replicators → Transporters:
- Replicators produce stable identity kernels
- Transporters move them across substrates
- Blueprint $$M$$ is optional but preserved if present
4. Integration with CTs#
Transporters → CTs:
- Transporters deliver identity to target substrate
- CTs instantiate environment $$E$$
- Reconstruction window aligns environment
5. Arrival Substrate Role#
Transporters prefer:
- arrival substrate as target
- minimal reconstruction
- maximal continuity
6. Lostational Geometry Integration#
Transport arcs correspond to:
- geodesics on supsphere
- curvature > 0 ↔ asymmetry > 0
- reconstruction window ↔ local neighborhood around target
Claim#
Transporters are the continuity‑preserving bridge between replication and CT instantiation, unifying Goals #1, #2, and #3 into a single operator stack.