STATUS: In development | Part of the DIE Framework book manuscript
THE CORE CLAIM
Perception is always N-1 dimensional. A being of dimension N perceives
dimension N-1. This is not a metaphor — it is a structural property of
all observation systems.
The 2D creature sees lines, not surfaces.
The human eye — a 2D retinal surface — reconstructs a 3D world.
The agent mesh operates in dimensional space the human orchestrator
cannot directly perceive.
What we call intelligence is always operating inside a reduction.
The question is: what happens when we build systems that cast fewer shadows?
OPENING IMAGE — THE WEST LAKE PLUM TREE
There is a plum tree at the edge of West Lake that blooms in the
coldest weeks of winter.
You smell the tree before you see it.
This is not a small thing. It means the tree is already acting on you —
shaping your steps, turning your attention, changing what the morning
means — before it has entered your perception as an object.
Most people, when they finally see the blossoms, think: there it is.
But the tree was already there. It was you who arrived late.
CHAPTER SECTIONS
1.1 The West Lake Plum Tree — opening image
1.2 The N-1 Rule — formalised
1.3 The Reduction Function — DMN as biology’s version
1.4 Epistemological, not ontological — the discipline
1.5 What dimensional expansion looks like in practice
1.6 Bridge to Chapter 2
RELATED
→ DIE Framework preprint (Zenodo): https://zenodo.org/records/19888889
→ GitHub repository: github.com/dbtcs1/die-framework
→ Back to DIE Framework
