Site icon John Rector

Morphic Field Eddies as Local Minima on the Entropic Gradient Descent of the Eternal Now

Abstract

This paper develops a formal account of how morphic fields and their embedded eddies—viewed as local minima on Gabriel’s Horn—sustain transient patterns in the Eternal Now. By treating the Infinite Surface as an entropic gradient descent from the Unknowable Future (high entropy) toward the Immutable Past (zero entropy), we show how underwater reservoirs (“eddies”) emerge, persist for characteristic timescales, and then reconfigure as part of the universal flow of possibility into actuality.

1. Introduction

The Eternal Now is modeled as Gabriel’s Horn submerged in the sea of pure possibility. Every indentation in the seafloor becomes an underwater reservoir—an eddy—that preserves distinct morphic patterns (memories, forms, identities) before they ultimately drain toward the Immutable Past. We here formalize that metaphor into a technical framework, defining the relationship between morphic-field structure, the geometry of local minima, and entropic flow dynamics.

2. Metaphysical Preliminaries

3. Morphic Field Geometry

Parametrize the Horn’s seafloor by coordinates (u, θ), with radial u > 0 and angular θ in [0, 2π). The surface height z = 1/u ensures infinite surface area. In this embedding:

4. Eddies as Underwater Reservoirs

An eddy is a submerged basin that traps flow:

5. Entropic Gradient Descent Dynamics

Define an entropic potential S(u) that decreases as u increases (moving toward the Immutable Past). The local slope dS/du sets the background flow velocity v(u), analogized to the speed of light c at maximal slope. Within an eddy, effective flow is reduced to veddy << c, allowing low-entropy structures to persist.

6. Pattern Persistence and Reconfiguration

7. Mathematical Model of Eddy Evolution

Let basin depth d(u, θ) and curvature κ(u, θ) define a local well depth U ∝ d²/κ. Basin evolution obeys the surface continuity equation:

∂d/∂t + ∇·(d v) = −α Δd
    

where α is an erosion constant and v the entropic flow field. Solutions reveal how eddy lifetimes and splitting probabilities depend on initial geometry and flow rate.

8. Implications and Applications

9. Conclusion

By uniting morphic-field theory with the hydrodynamics of eddies on Gabriel’s Horn, we obtain a rigorous picture of how patterns can persist, evolve, and eventually resolve in the Eternal Now. Future work may explore numerical simulations of basin networks and their statistical lifetimes under varied entropic flow regimes.

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