A Preliminary Theoretical Framework for the Ze System
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This preprint outlines a detailed theoretical framework for the "Ze System" (ZS), a proposed methodological paradigm for investigating phenomena that are not directly observable. It challenges the classical model of passive observation, positing that a significant portion of reality's structure exists in a latent, wave-like state of distributed possibilities (Zurek, 2003). The ZS is conceptualized as an active instrument designed to provoke the transition of these latent structures into a localized, observable ("particle") state. Its core operational principle is the deliberate engineering of predictive conflict: by forcing a system to resolve incompatible, high-precision predictions (e.g., Model A vs. Model B), hidden variables are compelled to manifest to avoid a logical-physical impasse. This manuscript elaborates the ontological foundations (reality as latent information flux), methodological pillars (predictive pressure, dual reading, manipulators), and the formal architecture of a ZS. We discuss potential applications in quantum phenomenology, pre-clinical disease detection, and cognitive science, while rigorously addressing the epistemological and ethical implications of an interventionist science. The framework synthesizes concepts from quantum measurement theory, predictive processing neuroscience, and complex systems biology into a novel proposal for experimental philosophy.