LAW OF TOTALITY — Public Threshold v0.1.2
LAW OF TOTALITY — Public Threshold Release
This release freezes the first public threshold of the Law of Totality repository.
Tag: v0.1.2
Commit: 63e7e9e
Created: 2026-06-15 10:40:06 UTC
What is frozen in this release
1. Public entry point
The public layer defines the practical core:
structural error begins when a local finite fragment is treated as if it were the whole structure.
This is the usable public threshold: clear, applicable, and testable on concrete cases.
2. Advanced theoretical layer
Included document:
docs/advanced/INFINITY-FIRST-TOTALITY.md
This deeper layer states the non-fragmenting correction:
The Infinite is not the result of explanation.
It is the condition from which every explanation falls into finite form.
The deeper principle is:
the Infinite Totality is primary; no finite form is independent from it; no finite form can coincide with it.
3. Applied demonstration
Included document:
docs/applied-cases/001-monty-hall.md
The Monty Hall case demonstrates the method publicly:
- the visible fragment says: two closed doors;
- the total generating structure includes the first choice, the host's knowledge, the host's rule, the revealed goat, and transferred information;
- the local fragment appears symmetrical;
- the total structure is asymmetrical;
- the correct solution is therefore switching:
2/3versus staying:1/3.
Core sentence:
A local fragment can look symmetrical while the total generating structure is asymmetrical.
Why this release matters
This release marks the transition from theory to public demonstrability.
The repository no longer contains only a conceptual formulation.
It now contains:
- a public structural law;
- a deeper infinity-first layer;
- a concrete applied case where the law exposes the error and restores the correct solution.
Stable claim
The Law of Totality does not claim to solve everything.
It identifies the structural error that appears when a finite local form is treated as autonomous, complete, or total.
A finite visible number, model, answer, theory, or explanation may be locally true and still become decisionally wrong when it is mistaken for the whole structure.