Section 1: Introduction and Purpose
By Brian Miller
The Structure of Everything Interaction (SEI) theory proposes that all physical, biological, and metaphysical systems emerge from a single underlying dynamic: a triadic interaction between two fixed polarities and a third mediating element. This core structure is seen as the source of emergence, complexity, transformation, and coherence across all scales of reality.
The SEI model challenges the conventional notion that reality is built from isolated entities or fields. Instead, it posits that everything arises through structured relationships — not as secondary phenomena, but as the ontological foundation of existence. The polar elements (A and B) generate a mediating dynamic (X), whose interaction forms the basis for consequence (C):
$$C = f(A, B, X)$$
This formulation is not merely mathematical but conceptual. It defines a logic of generative structure that applies from quantum fields to cognitive processes, from spacetime curvature to symbolic meaning.
SEI’s purpose is to unify the explanatory frameworks of quantum mechanics, general relativity, consciousness, biology, and metaphysics by identifying a shared underlying structure. Where traditional theories fragment the universe into separate domains, SEI seeks to reveal their common foundation.
This first section sets the stage for the SEI theory’s deeper mathematical formulation, physical mapping, and interdisciplinary consequences.