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FOUNDATIONAL DOCUMENT III FOUNDATIONAL AXIOMS OF THE THEORY OF STRUCTURAL SYSTEMS OF ENTROPIC RESISTANCE (TESERE)

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  FOUNDATIONAL DOCUMENT III FOUNDATIONAL AXIOMS OF THE THEORY OF STRUCTURAL SYSTEMS OF ENTROPIC RESISTANCE (TESERE) By Yoel Marrero PREAMBLE TESERE begins from the hypothesis that multiple domains of reality share common structural principles related to organization, persistence, identity, regeneration, and resistance against entropic degradation. The following axioms constitute the provisional foundational principles upon which the doctrinal system of TESERE is organized. These axioms should not be understood as absolute dogmas, but as foundational operational postulates that allow the conceptual framework of the theory to be coherently organized. AXIOM I OF STRUCTURAL RESTRICTION Every persistent structure coherently restricts the space of possible states compatible with its identity. Organized existence implies coherent limitation of incompatible possibilities. AXIOM II OF STRUCTURAL IDENTITY Identity emerges from the dynamic coherence between structure, organization, and inform...

PREAMBLE TO A STRUCTURAL THEORY OF ORGANIZATIONAL RESISTANCE

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  PREAMBLE TO A STRUCTURAL THEORY OF ORGANIZATIONAL RESISTANCE (First doctrinal formulation) There are moments in the lives of certain individuals when reality ceases to appear as a mere succession of isolated events and begins to reveal itself as a network of deeply interconnected structures. Language, music, religion, culture, human movement, societies, political ideas, educational systems, and even life itself seem to respond, under different forms, to recurring organizational principles. This reflection emerges precisely from that intuition. Through years of observation, study, and intercultural experience, it gradually became evident that phenomena apparently unrelated shared similar structural patterns. Behind their superficial differences there appeared to exist common deep grammars: • organizational structures; • mechanisms of transmission; • dynamics of preservation; • and constant processes of degradation and reorganization. This perception did not arise solely from philo...