Research Registry

Publications

Each paper carries a formal ID, version, status, and SealForge receipt. Claims are governed: what a paper may prove and what it may not are stated explicitly.

SLA-KUHN-001 · v0.2
PreprintSeal pending
What Kuhn Described: A Formal Grammar for Scientific Revolution
Kuhn's Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) documents the same structural events formalized independently by SLA. This paper presents the formal mapping, introduces the P1/T3 distinction Kuhn described phenomenologically but did not formalize, applies the R1 taxonomy to classify four types of scientific revolution, and diagnoses the replication crisis as an active T3 event with predominantly Type C responses.
Author: Ellari · Ellari InstituteContact: research@ellari.instituteTarget: PhilSci-Archive · OSF Preprints
SLA-EXT-R1-001 · v0.1
Registry Extension
R1 Availability Taxonomy — Formal Registry Extension
Four structurally distinct R1 states: unavailable (A), available but not taken (B), false repair (C), directional (D). Clinical directive and canonical specimens across literature, music, design, software, and scientific paradigms.
Author: Ellari · Ellari InstituteStatus: Internal draft
SLA-L0-001
Forthcoming
Level 0 Grammar: Coherence, Collapse, and Return
The three axioms from which all SLA L1 primitives derive. Medium-agnostic derivation with empirical cross-domain confirmation across nine independent domains.
Status: In preparation
notAllowedToProve
The Institute cannot claim the grammar is universal — the corpus is purposive, not random. Cannot diagnose specific people, companies, or systems without their participation. Cannot claim the framework is complete. Cannot claim that independent confirmation by Kuhn or raga tradition constitutes peer review. A well-structured system is not automatically a true system.