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M′

Definition

M′ is the inverse structural-length representation used within the LMR codex.

It belongs to the A-side structural grammar and is read as inverse length, not as SI mass.

Within LMR, M′ provides the structural representation through which mass-like behavior may later become legible without treating mass as a foundational primitive.


Tier Placement

Primary tier: Tier 1

Role: Structural representation

M′ belongs to the foundational dimensional grammar established in Paper I.

It must be read according to codex side discipline and not imported directly into standard mass language.


Source

Primary source: Paper I — Codex and Foundational Grammar

Authority level: Foundational

Paper I establishes the notation and representational rules required for reading M′ within the LMR grammar.


Function in LMR

M′ functions as the inverse structural-length face of the grammar.

It supports:

  • dimensional inversion
  • A-side representation
  • side discipline
  • hourglass placement
  • relation to λ
  • later persistence and normalization readings

M′ allows mass-like structure to be handled grammatically without making SI mass a Tier 1 primitive.


Allowed Use

M′ may be used as a Tier 1 inverse structural-length representation.

It may be used in the hourglass grammar when read according to the notation and side rules established in Paper I.


Prohibited Misuse

M′ must not be treated as:

  • SI mass
  • ordinary kilogram mass
  • a dynamical source
  • a force source
  • a field source
  • a substitute for standard inertial or gravitational mass
  • a Tier 3 correspondence object unless explicitly declared

It must not be read outside the side discipline of the codex.



See Also