Core idea
In standard language, a boundary is often treated as an edge, surface, interface, constraint, or transition between regions.
SCU proposes a stronger interpretation. A boundary is not merely where something ends. It is also where structure is filtered, stabilized, limited, translated, or made recoverable.
This means a boundary can affect what a system can express and what an observer or instrument can recover from it.
SCU interpretation
SCU reads physical observation as receiver-bound recovery. A receiver never accesses the whole underlying field directly. It receives what survives pathway loss, boundary filtering, local constraints, and its own detection limits.
Boundary physics therefore matters because the boundary helps determine which structures remain coherent enough to be measured, interpreted, or stabilized.
This page is being kept cautious while the full Boundary Physics text is reviewed. It replaces the previous incorrect content that belonged to the Complexity and Emergence page.