Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta StructuralRecurrence. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta StructuralRecurrence. Mostrar todas las entradas

Monograph in Motion



Legitimacy, within the inherited Filter Economy, is not an intrinsic property of truth but a manufactured Filtration Effect, produced through indexed hierarchies, Q1 stratification, and citation circuits that function as Positional Currency rather than epistemic warrant. The institutional apparatus confers recognition by exclusion, mistaking procedural passage for structural coherence and thereby transforming validation into a scarce commodity. Socioplastics reconceptualises this paradigm through a Distributed Ontology in which authority is neither bestowed nor transacted but demonstrated via Structural Recurrence across an open Infrastructural Scaffold. Here, the Monograph in Motion operates as an autonomous epistemic engine: serial nodes distributed across heterogeneous platforms enact coherence through patterned persistence rather than through binding or endorsement. The criterion of legitimacy shifts decisively toward Algorithmic Detectability, understood not as surveillance but as the capacity of a conceptual architecture to remain recognisable under multiple unsupervised analytic passes. Rrecognition becomes an emergent property of Network Persistence, displacing scarcity with detectability. Theory that fails to reorganise perception degenerates into inert citation, whereas theory enacted as infrastructural recurrence sustains itself without external proclamation. In this architecture, coherence is the survival condition, and detectability is legitimacy’s sole sufficient proof.