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Fall 2025 — Reality Equation First (Ideas-Only Semester)

Purpose. Start from the Reality Equation, lock the numerator and predictor to isolate the imaginary part of the denominator, and compute it from event samples via the resultant vector. The template family for the semester is Love, The Cosmic Dance; math first (logos), then translation (mythos).

0) The Reality Equation

Reality is the ratio of Actual to Expectation:

Expectation is complex:

Witness readouts:

Axiom. The past is immutable. Consequences: the center is a permanent node; the predictor stays strictly positive (); absolute actualization () is impossible.

1) Fall scope (locks to isolate ideas)

2) Logos (math lens): event-sample definition of the resultant vector

Resultant vector. For a chosen time window, each idea event contributes one unit arrow at its angle on the unit circle. Add them tip-to-tail to get the single arrow .

Split once into perpendicular components:

Plug into Reality (ideas-only locks):

Mantras. Add unit arrows first. Split once. Only k reaches the denominator. Every M is the fingerprint of an infinity.

3) Mythos (template lens): Love, The Cosmic Dance

Template family for the semester. We keep the math agnostic, then translate with this case study after the computation.

Line we use: “Ideas have people; people do not have ideas.” Mathematically, idea space is continuous (infinite). A system is always in relation with all ideas; opposite directions cancel in the round; the remainder in a window yields .

Overlay rule. Compute first; only then place names on sectors (for example, your four cardinal ideas). Translation is template-specific and always comes after logos.

4) Levels and windows

5) Canonical Fall pipeline (what students do)

  1. Gather event angles for a window; place unit arrows; sum to get .
  2. Read .
  3. Compute via projections.
  4. With , compute .
  5. Optional: alignment score as the idea’s view of how well the system carries the mark.
  6. Only after the math: overlay the template names (mythos).

6) Quick interpretive anchors

7) Stock exercises (Fall)

8) Laws and guardrails

9) Assessment map (Fall)

10) Spring preview

Spring is the predictor semester. We unfreeze and model it (stochastic baselines, Markov transitions, Bayesian updates). Ideas stay as . The full readout is with both parts moving.

One-line takeaway. Compute the resultant from event samples, split once into realization and mark ; pass only k to the denominator of the Reality Equation.

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