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Simple Glossary

Every term explained as if you're hearing it for the first time.


Boundary

Synonym for enclosure. The line that separates inside from outside. A cell wall, a fence, a rule, a definition — all boundaries.

Calling

The first rule: two identical marks next to each other are the same as one (## → #). Redundancy condenses into unity. Saying the same thing twice doesn't add information.

Crossing

The second rule: an enclosure around an enclosure cancels ([[A]] → A). What's inside gets out. A double negative becomes a positive. Crossing twice returns to the start.

Distinction

The fundamental act: drawing a line that creates "this" and "that" simultaneously. The starting point for all knowledge, all measurement, all language. You cannot have a distinction with only one side.

Enclosure

The symbol [ ] that creates inside and outside. A container. A grouping. A category. A boundary. One of the three primitives.

Juxtaposition

Placing marks or expressions side by side. The operation of "and also." Creates multiplicity, collections, sequences. One of the three primitives.

Mark

The symbol # that says "something is here." The simplest possible signal. A heartbeat, a pixel, a data point, a yes. One of the three primitives.

Metastable

A pattern that looks stable but can be triggered into change by a small disturbance. Like a ball balanced at the top of a hill, or a thought you're "fine" with until someone asks about it.

Pattern

Repetition + difference + relation. Something that happens more than once, with variation, in connection. Not a thing — a motion. Not a noun — a verb. The pattern is never any single instance of itself.

Pattern Literacy

The ability to see patterns as patterns — to recognize what's repeating, what's varying, and what's connected — without mistaking the pattern for a fixed identity. The meta-skill this primer teaches.

Primitives

The three fundamental operations from which everything else is built: Mark, Enclosure, Juxtaposition. With only these, you can describe any structure in any discipline.

Reduction

Applying Calling or Crossing to simplify a pattern. Reducing ## to #, or [[A]] to A. Like simplifying a fraction — the value is preserved, the expression is cleaner.

Stability

The property of a pattern that cannot be simplified further by Calling or Crossing. Stable patterns persist. Unstable patterns reorganize. Everything that exists is a stable pattern (under current conditions).

STC (Syntactic Token Calculus)

The formal system built from the three primitives and two rules. It generates particle physics, cosmology, and quantum computation from pure syntax. The full technical treatment is in the QLoF monograph.

Tilt (One-Degree Tilt)

Changing one small thing — a condition, a context, a relation — and letting the pattern reorganize around it. The opposite of Forcing. The quietest and often most effective way to shift a stuck pattern.

Void

The absence of any mark. The blank page before anything is drawn. Not "nothing" in an existential sense — simply the ground state from which all distinctions emerge. Zero, silence, empty space, stillness.

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