Why Static Ontology Is Insufficient: The Logical Necessity of Transition
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Abstract
If structure exists, something must happen—static ontology collapses. This paper examines whether an ontology that satisfies minimal structural requirements—identity, distinction, and relation—can remain fully static while remaining nontrivially describable. Building on prior results establishing the descriptive instability of absolute nothingness and the necessity of minimal structure, the paper analyzes the logical sufficiency of static ontology. A static ontology can exist, but it explains nothing unless it includes a way to tell states apart. It is shown that a purely static ontology collapses into either descriptive triviality or underdetermination. From this result, the paper derives a logical necessity…
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Ontology
- Nothing
- Constraint (computer-aided design)
- Logical consequence
- Transition (genetics)
- Non-classical logic
- Logical conjunction
- Reciprocal
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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