Asymptotic Phase and the Epistemic Vector: Beyond Probabilistic Mechanics Toward Coherent Consciousness
Abstract
This paper proposes a novel framework—phase epistemology—for understanding knowledge as an emergent property of structural resonance, rather than as a product of inferential or probabilistic processes. At the heart of this model lies the epistemic vector: a directional trajectory of intelligibility that arises through asymptotic phase coherence between observer and observed. Rather than treating knowledge as representation or correspondence, the paper situates it within a recursive phase alignment that evolves over time toward topological stabilization. Drawing from quantum theory, philosophy of mind and structural realism, the paper suggests that semantic collapse—the moment when ambiguity resolves into meaning—is governed not by logic alone but by relational coherence. This collapse mirrors the wave-function reduction in quantum measurement and links it to cognitive interpretation. The observer is not a passive recipient of information but an active phase participant whose internal structure aligns with latent fields—including what is metaphorically framed here as dark matter or dark energy. The proposed epistemic framework bridges the quantum–classical divide through the notion of asymptotic cognition, in which consciousness functions as a boundary condition for the stabilization of meaning. Improbability, in this context, is not a statistical deviation but a phase singularity—a point of maximum informational tension and epistemic reorganization. Ultimately, this paper argues for a redefinition of knowledge as a dynamic topology of coherence. It invites new perspectives on cognition, agency, intentionality and the structure of reality itself—where to know is to resonate and to resonate is to shape the possible.