Unified Field Theory (UFT) as the Grammar of Difference

Abstract

This article develops a philosophical reinterpretation of gravity as the asymptotic fold of ontological difference into stable phase coherence. Departing from traditional conceptions that treat gravitation as a force or as spacetime curvature, we propose a dynamic framework in which coherence — not mass or energy — serves as the primary organizational principle. Drawing from phase-space formalism, topology and metaphysics, we introduce the concept of the assemblage point as a singular phase location where divergent trajectories converge through resonance. Gravity is thus reframed as an emergent trace of recursive alignment, not imposed from above, but arising from within systems as they seek to stabilize internal differentiation. This view challenges linear causal models and supports a unified field theory grounded in coherence rather than substance. Ultimately, we argue that gravitation is not a law, but a phase-based grammar of intelligibility — the geometry of sustained difference.

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2025-06-03

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