Field Anchor
A field anchor is a reversible anchoring unit that makes a stabilized field softly addressable without converting it into symbolic storage.
Definition
A field anchor is the transition point between field ontology and interface grammar.
Up to this point in the RFL stack, relation becomes field, field stabilizes, and attractors emerge. But a stabilized field is still not yet addressable.
A field anchor is what allows a field to be referenced, returned to, and interacted with without being stored as a point, object, or record.
It does not freeze the field. It does not convert it into data.
It provides a minimal operational handle while preserving reversibility, softness, and non-symbolic continuity.
A field anchor appears only when density is sufficient, stability is sustained, and reversibility remains intact.
This is the condition under which a field can be touched without collapsing.
Mechanic
Key properties
System role
Field anchoring is what makes the transition possible from field existence to field interaction.
Without field anchors, fields remain real, stable, and meaningful, but not operable.
With field anchors, fields become softly addressable, revisitable, and placeable in interaction.
Relation to Chromapin
Chromapin is the concrete implementation of field anchoring.
A chromapin is therefore a field anchor expressed as an addressable unit within an ambient system.