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Главный автор: Bresciano, Claudio
Формат: Recurso digital
Язык:английский
Опубликовано: Zenodo 2026
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Online-ссылка:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20249149
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author Bresciano, Claudio
author_facet Bresciano, Claudio
contents <p>This paper explores the structural convergence between the Theory of Axiomatic Necessity (TNA) and classical theological ontology, mapping theological concepts without reducing them to physics or mathematics. Distinguishing between local observable dynamics (<span class="math-inline">$N_0$</span>) and the non-local domain of external selection and realizability constraints (<span class="math-inline">$N_1$</span>), the author demonstrates that complex realizable systems exhibit a Failure of Local Closure, generating multiple admissible trajectories (<span class="math-inline">$\Delta > 1$</span>) that cannot self-stabilize. Within this framework, foundational Christian tenets—including the Johannine Logos, <em>creatio continua</em>, sacramentality, and Eucharistic participation—are reinterpreted structurally as interface mechanisms that bridge local dynamics with non-local closure. Ultimately, the paper posits that mathematical intelligibility does not eliminate theological mystery, but rather formalizes exactly why complete materialist closure remains structurally impossible.</p>
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spellingShingle TNA as a Structural Framework for Transcendence, Sacramentality, and Non-Closure
Bresciano, Claudio
Theory of Axiomatic Necessity (TNA), $N_0$, $N_1$, Theological ontology, Failure of Local Closure, Transcendence, Sacramentality, Logos, Creatio continua, Eucharistic participation, Multiplicity, Mathematical intelligibility, Non-local closure, Non-derivability, Eicosanoid dynamics.
<p>This paper explores the structural convergence between the Theory of Axiomatic Necessity (TNA) and classical theological ontology, mapping theological concepts without reducing them to physics or mathematics. Distinguishing between local observable dynamics (<span class="math-inline">$N_0$</span>) and the non-local domain of external selection and realizability constraints (<span class="math-inline">$N_1$</span>), the author demonstrates that complex realizable systems exhibit a Failure of Local Closure, generating multiple admissible trajectories (<span class="math-inline">$\Delta > 1$</span>) that cannot self-stabilize. Within this framework, foundational Christian tenets—including the Johannine Logos, <em>creatio continua</em>, sacramentality, and Eucharistic participation—are reinterpreted structurally as interface mechanisms that bridge local dynamics with non-local closure. Ultimately, the paper posits that mathematical intelligibility does not eliminate theological mystery, but rather formalizes exactly why complete materialist closure remains structurally impossible.</p>
title TNA as a Structural Framework for Transcendence, Sacramentality, and Non-Closure
topic Theory of Axiomatic Necessity (TNA), $N_0$, $N_1$, Theological ontology, Failure of Local Closure, Transcendence, Sacramentality, Logos, Creatio continua, Eucharistic participation, Multiplicity, Mathematical intelligibility, Non-local closure, Non-derivability, Eicosanoid dynamics.
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20249149