CP-1 — Chromapin: Field Anchoring for Relational and Civic Addressability
CP-1 defines Chromapin as the reversible field anchor through which stabilized relational and civic fields become softly addressable without collapsing into symbolic storage, profile identity, map markers, or assistant-device logic.
Definition
CP-1 is the execution paper for field anchoring in the relational and civic line. It defines the threshold at which a stabilized field becomes softly addressable without collapsing into archive, profile, coordinate, map pin, or assistant-device logic.
Where prior layers established relational field formation (RFL-1), synchronization into personal infrastructure (RFL-2), temporal and distributive operators (WSC-1), social convergence (RFL-3), civic emergence (RFL-4), civilizational coordination (RFL-5), institutional softening (RFL-6), and ambient closure (RFL-Ω), CP-1 defines how such stabilized fields become touchable, revisitable, and operational.
A field may exist. A field may stabilize. A field may guide. But it still requires a minimal landing unit if it is to become interactable without falling back into old symbolic systems.
Chromapin solves this by defining a bounded, reversible anchoring layer that preserves field continuity while enabling soft return, reference, placement, and addressability.
Core claim
A stabilized relational or civic field becomes softly addressable when its accumulated continuity crosses anchoring threshold while remaining reversible, bounded, and non-symbolic.
Operational formula
Where presenceᵢ = repeated meaningful co-presence or public recurrence, residueᵢ = bounded relational or civic afterfield, ΔR = reversibility condition, θ_anchor = anchoring threshold, and pin = chromapin state.
Extended chain
Eissens, R. (2026). CP-1 — Chromapin: Field Anchoring for Relational and Civic Addressability (1.0). Zenodo.