Coherence Field Theory formalizes the structural mechanics that govern coherence, drift, compatibility, environmental stability, and invariant preservation across systems and fields. It defines the architectural conditions under which coherence forms, stabilizes, and collapses.
FOUNDATIONAL ARCHITECTURE
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Layer 1: Coherence vs. Incoherence
• Defines the structural distinction between alignment and drift.
Layer 2: Drift Mechanics
• Formalizes how distortion emerges, propagates, and destabilizes systems.
Layer 3: Field Compatibility
• Describes cross‑field interaction, interference, and structural thresholds.
Layer 4: Coherence‑Preserving Environments
• Specifies the environmental conditions that stabilize architectural invariants.
Layer 5: Architectural Invariants
• Defines the invariant properties that remain stable across motion and pressure.
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The five layers form the complete foundational membrane of the discipline.