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| Автори: | , , |
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| Формат: | Recurso digital |
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| Опубліковано: |
Zenodo
2026
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| Предмети: | |
| Онлайн доступ: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20401556 |
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Зміст:
- The displacement framework has been applied across twenty-seven domains: biological disease, psychiatric condition, social phenomenon, physical system, aesthetic domain, and environmental crisis. We synthesize the cross-domain findings and identify three master structural patterns that emerge only when the full scope of applications is considered simultaneously. The first pattern is the universal wrong attractor: every chronic condition --- addiction, depression, trauma, cancer, CF, HIV, Alzheimer's disease, aging, loneliness --- installs a stable displaced state that is self-reinforcing, incompatible with original ground state function, and progressively more costly to return from. The second pattern is the G hierarchy: extraction by displacement operates simultaneously at molecular, cellular, organismal, interpersonal, institutional, and planetary scales, each scale's G compounding with others through shared enforcement mechanisms. The third pattern is the sleep convergence: sleep appears as a significant factor in more application domains than any other single variable because its three functions --- glymphatic clearance, synaptic homeostasis, and REM displacement processing --- address displacement costs that accumulate in every waking biological system. From these patterns we derive a total displacement equation, reformulate DC5 (irreversibility) as the universal policy implication, propose a unified displacement index for measuring total condition burden across dimensions, and state six principles for designing systems that minimize G and preserve return paths. The displacement framework is not a metaphor applied to multiple domains. It is a single structural account of how systems lose and recover their ground states, operating at every scale simultaneously.