Free Lattice Unit
Definition
The free lattice unit is the homogeneous reference configuration of the lattice before relational distinction is introduced.
It functions as the baseline against which perturbation, compression, redistribution, and persistence are defined.
The free lattice unit is not a physical particle, medium, field element, or spatial cell.
Tier Placement
Primary tier: Tier 1
Role: Structural baseline
The free lattice unit belongs to the foundational lattice grammar established in Paper II.
Source
Primary source: Paper II — Lattice, Perturbation, and Persistence
Authority level: Foundational structural
Paper II introduces the free lattice unit as the reference state of the lattice.
Function in LMR
The free lattice unit functions as the baseline condition from which structural distinction becomes meaningful.
It supports:
- definition of perturbation
- relational scale comparison
- compression as structural distinction
- redistribution
- persistence
- structural minimality
Without the free lattice unit, there is no reference configuration against which a perturbation can be distinguished.
Allowed Use
The free lattice unit may be used as the Tier 1 structural reference condition of the lattice.
It may be used when discussing perturbation, redistribution, and persistence.
Prohibited Misuse
The free lattice unit must not be treated as:
- an atom of space
- a physical cell
- a material substrate
- a field quantum
- a particle
- an ether element
- a dynamical unit
It is a reference configuration, not a thing moving through space.