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Admissible Seating

Definition

Admissible seating is the structural condition under which one configuration can be placed in compatible relation to another without violating the LMR grammar.

It is especially important for composite structures involving open half-folds and basin facings.

Admissible seating is not attachment, bonding, attraction, orbital motion, or force-mediated binding in Tier 1.


Tier Placement

Primary tier: Tier 1

Role: Interface compatibility condition

Admissible seating belongs to the structural classification layer developed in Paper III.


Source

Primary source: Paper III — Emergence and Structure

Authority level: Foundational structural classification

Paper III uses admissible seating to describe structural compatibility between persistent configurations.


Function in LMR

Admissible seating functions as the grammar of compatible structural relation.

It supports:

  • composite structure
  • hydrogen-class configuration
  • facing engagement
  • compatibility evaluation
  • ξ̂ as admissibility evaluator
  • distinction between seating and torsion locking

Admissible seating explains how configurations may coexist structurally without invoking force or dynamics.


Allowed Use

Admissible seating may be used when discussing composite structures, proton-class basin interfaces, electron-class open half-folds, and hydrogen-class configuration.

It may be used in later chemistry or measurement branches when explicitly tied to structural compatibility.


Prohibited Misuse

Admissible seating must not be treated as:

  • physical attachment
  • chemical bonding by default
  • electrostatic attraction
  • orbital capture
  • force balance
  • energy minimization
  • temporal assembly
  • mechanical insertion

Seating is structural compatibility, not motion or binding.



See Also