
- Home
- Materials
- Methodological Foundations of the Series
- Introduction to the Series
- Living Systems
- Structural Dynamics of the Evolution
- Animal Magnetism
- Territories and Landscapes
- Cultural Systems
- Shamanic Practices of North America
- Religious Systems
- SSIFS: Hybrid Information-Field Systems
- Digital Environments
- Economic Systems
- Spatiotemporal Logic of Structural Systems
- Conclusion of the Article Series
- Learning
- Blog
- About us
- Contacts
- English
Domains of Application
Below are types of environments and structures to which the established analytical frame applies. These are not examples, case studies, or instructions.
Navigation Principle
The same approach is used across all sections. What changes is the structure of the environment, not the method.
Domains of Analysis
Living Systems
Analysis of structural configurations forming in biological and behavioral systems without assuming a controlling subject.
Territories and Landscapes
Consideration of spatial configurations as carriers of persistent structural states, independent of ongoing events.
Cultural and Symbolic Environments
Analysis of distributed structures that stabilize norms, behaviors, and calibration mechanisms without centralized control.
Religious Systems
Examination of stable non-subjective configurations operating through rituals, texts, and collective practices.
Economic Systems
Analysis of structural contours that constrain admissible trajectories of decisions and redistribution without reference to participants’ goals.
Institutional and Governmental Structures
Consideration of stable systems of constraints and procedures as properties of the environment rather than governing subjects.
Digital Environments
Analysis of dense and accelerated support configurations forming secondary territories and persistent structural imprints.
Event-Based Configurations
Consideration of crises, conflicts, and transitional states as structural regimes rather than isolated events.
Closing Fixation
The choice of domain defines the material of analysis, but does not alter the frame, distinctions, or limits of the approach.
