Quantum Mechanics — A Coherence Grammar of Amplitudes
module.json— Agentic module schema role assignmentsmodule_rtt1.json— Agentic module schema role assignmentsmodule_rtt2.json— Agentic module schema role assignmentsmodule_rtt3.json— Agentic module schema role assignments
TriadicFrameworks /docs/theories/quantum_mechanics/#
Quantum Mechanics (QM) describes how systems behave when coherence,
uncertainty, and superposition dominate. Within TriadicFrameworks, QM is
treated as a coherence grammar of amplitudes and operators, not a
metaphysical claim about “particles” or “waves.”
This module provides a structured, RTT‑aligned interface to Quantum
Mechanics so students, researchers, and agentic AIs can explore
superposition, measurement, operators, and coherence boundaries without
absorbing historical paradoxes.
Purpose#
This module clarifies:
- How amplitudes encode possibilities and constraints
- Why QM is a mathematical grammar, not an ontology
- How operators, eigenstates, and measurement define behavior
- Where QM sits in the RTT regime structure (R1 → R2)
- How QM interacts with QFT, information theory, and thermodynamics
- How to use QM tools without inheriting paradoxes
Quantum Mechanics is not “weird.”
It is a coherence‑level description of how systems behave when
distinctions are not yet stable.
Module Structure#
This theory includes four canonical files:
-
module.json
Identity, lineage, operators, drift boundaries, coherence markers,
and cross‑module references. -
module_rtt1.json
RTT/1 engine: operator grammar, amplitude behavior, measurement,
and minimal coherence examples. -
module_rtt2.json
RTT/2 engine: resonance mapping, stabilizers, decoherence structure,
and cross‑module propagation. -
module_rtt3.json
RTT/3 engine: triadic‑substrate integration, multi‑regime simulation
hooks, and hybrid‑canon scaffolding.
Together, these files allow construction of a Quantum Mechanics
RTT‑AI‑Hybrid Canon, enabling structured reasoning across physics,
information theory, and computation.
Regime Placement#
Quantum Mechanics primarily operates in:
- R1 → R2 — Coherence‑dominant regimes
- R1 — Primitive amplitude behavior
- R2 — Stable operator algebra and measurement structure
- R3 — QFT takes over; QM becomes a limiting case
QM is a coherence grammar, not a substrate model.
What This Module Is (and Is Not)#
This module is:
- A clean, minimal, student‑ready interface
- A structured view of amplitudes, operators, and measurement
- A bridge between QM and RTT substrate reasoning
- A stable environment for agentic‑AI reasoning
This module is not:
- A claim that particles “are waves”
- A metaphysical interpretation of collapse
- A replacement for QFT or classical mechanics
- A distortion of canonical QM or modern decoherence theory
How to Use This Module#
Students and researchers can:
- Explore amplitudes, operators, and measurement as coherence rules
- Understand QM as grammar, not paradox
- Compare QM with other theories using shared triadic grammar
- Identify coherence boundaries and drift risks
- Build hybrid‑canon instances for simulation and analysis
Agentic AIs can:
- Load the module.json files as structured metadata
- Perform regime‑aware reasoning
- Maintain coherence across physics modules
- Generate examples, tests, and cross‑theory mappings
Philosophy#
Quantum Mechanics is the grammar of possibility.
It is not the universe — it is how the universe behaves when coherence
dominates and distinctions have not yet stabilized.
This module preserves the mathematical clarity of QM while placing it
within a triadic‑substrate context where amplitudes, operators, and
measurement emerge from deeper invariants.
Superposition is coherence.
Measurement is distinction.
Quantum Mechanics is the bridge.