Every coordination failure has a structure. The meeting that ends in false consensus. The community that burns out its most generous members. The organization that loses its clarity the moment it scales. These aren’t personality problems. They’re predictable failures of structure — diagnosable before they collapse.
Recognition Infrastructure maps four capacities every functioning system requires: coherent position, genuine contact, limits communicated as information, and architecture that persists when the originator leaves. These four form a tetrahedron — the minimum solid geometry. Remove any vertex and it collapses. No redundancy. Four capacities, four seductive failure modes, six edges holding them in tension.
Most coordination frameworks prescribe new behaviors into the same shape. This one diagnoses the load path first. The pattern has held across cases spanning fifty years — from a Colombian village that survived a drug war to worker cooperatives that outlasted their founders. When all four are present, systems survive. When one goes missing, the failure is specific and predictable.
Start anywhere. Each page is self-contained. The geometry will be there when you arrive.
Where do you want to start?
Recognition Infrastructure
A coordination framework built on one observation: before you can build with someone, you have to see what they actually are — and they have to see you. Four capacities make this possible.
Which of these feels weakest in what you are building?
Synthesis
Why a tetrahedron? Because it is the minimum solid. Three vertices give you a plane—flat, fragile, no interior. Four vertices create the first shape with volume, the simplest structure that encloses space. Every face is a triangle (maximum rigidity per edge). Every vertex connects to every other vertex. Remove any single vertex and the solid collapses into a plane. There is no redundancy, no vertex you can lose.
This is not metaphor. It is structural: the minimum viable geometry of a recognition system.
The geometry constrains the theory. Four vertices means exactly six edges—every pair connected, no optional relationships. Four faces means four failure modes—each face defined by the three vertices that remain when one is missing. One whole means the system is irreducible.
The Network
Each node is a self-contained piece of the pattern. Navigate by relationship, not hierarchy.