A standardized event architecture for measuring cycles, recording state change, and building cultural memory across domains.
Explore the ArchitectureThe glyph event record is the fundamental unit of the Heyer Livin system. It is a standardized data structure designed to capture one complete event cycle. Each record is self-contained, comparable, and domain-portable.
The bounded event window being observed
The decisive state change within the cycle
Ratios and measurements computed from the event
Where the record sits in the system pipeline
Point-in-time state preservation
Links to other records, domains, or system layers
Context, interpretation, and researcher annotations
Self is the prior state. Interaction is the event. Reality is the new information produced by that exchange.
This is not a metaphor. It is the structural description of how each glyph event record is generated.
Structured event recording for observation-based study across social science, cultural analysis, and interdisciplinary inquiry.
The glyph record architecture provides the foundation for computational modeling of constrained systems and event-cycle measurement.
Tools for interpreting symbolic meaning, narrative structure, and expressive output through the standardized event record.
The classical simulation engine. Runs event cycles across domains. Counts outcomes. Observes where distributions land. Empirical measurement across structured trials.
The quantum constraint architecture. Reframes the event cycle as a Hamiltonian operator. The structural attractor is not approximated but derived as a ground state eigenvalue. The classical result is not counted. It is explained.