Hourglass Grammar
Purpose
Hourglass Grammar defines a central structural routing pattern used in Length–Mass Reduction.
It organizes the relation between inverse structural length, frequency, time, and structural length within the codex grammar.
The Hourglass is not a drawing of motion, causal flow, physical transport, or mechanical process. It is a diagrammatic grammar for structural relation and admissible routing.
Authority Level
Authority: Foundational
Hourglass Grammar belongs to the foundational codex apparatus established in Paper I and extended through Arc 1.
It provides the diagrammatic structure through which later routing, projection, and normalization relations may be expressed.
Tier Placement
Primary tier: Tier 1
Role: Diagrammatic routing grammar
Hourglass Grammar is part of the Tier 1 structural grammar of LMR.
It is used before force, field, dynamics, or mechanism are introduced.
What the Diagram Shows
Hourglass Grammar organizes structural relation among paired dimensional roles.
It is used to distinguish:
- inverse structural length
- structural length
- frequency
- time
- crossing relation
- mirror relation
- routing relation
- admissible structural correspondence
In its inner form, the Hourglass organizes:
- M′
- f
- t
- λ
The diagram helps express how these quantities relate structurally without treating their relation as a physical process.
What the Diagram Does Not Show
Hourglass Grammar does not show:
- motion through space
- causal transport
- energy transfer
- force interaction
- field propagation
- particle dynamics
- spacetime curvature
- standard mechanism
It does not introduce new primitives.
It does not override Paper I.
Reading Rule
The Hourglass must be read as structural grammar.
Crossing, routing, and adjacency in the diagram indicate codex-governed relation, not physical motion or causal sequence.
A quantity placed in the Hourglass must be read according to its tier, side, and role.
Function in LMR
Hourglass Grammar functions as a structural routing map.
It supports:
- dimensional relation
- inversion discipline
- mirror relation
- admissible routing
- projection grammar
- normalization grammar
- later electromagnetic and gravitational diagrammatic extensions
The Hourglass provides a controlled way to express structural relation without importing dynamics.