Projection, Irreversible Time, and the limits of process recoverability.
This work examines driven, irreversible systems under finite observational projection, focusing on the structural consequences that arise when processes cannot be fully resolved across time. Rather than constructing unified causal explanations, the analysis treats time irreversibility and projection as non-negotiable constraints and examines how system behavior becomes fragmented across distinct visibility conditions. Within this framework, three non-interchangeable observational regimes emerge-instantaneous distinguishability, transitional progression, and deposited structure-linked only through residual formation and constrained coupling. A set of recurring real-world phenomena-including aviation system failures, large-scale auroral redistribution, viral emergence patterns, and organizational-capital dynamics-are examined solely in terms of how they appear under these projection conditions, without cross-scale reconstruction or causal closure. The work does not seek to resolve these phenomena into explanatory chains, but to show that apparent failure, persistence, or control cannot be meaningfully interpreted without respecting irreversible time, finite projection, and the non-compressibility of living systems.
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