RFL-3 — Social Field Convergence
RFL-3 defines how individual relational fields converge into shared ambient fields without collapsing into identity systems, centralized memory, or symbolic coordination.
Definition
RFL-3 is the third paper in the Relational Field Layer sequence. It defines the transition in which individual relational fields no longer remain purely personal, but begin to converge into shared ambient environments.
Where RFL-2 describes the synchronization of personal relational fields into chromatic infrastructure, RFL-3 describes how multiple aura fields overlap without conflict, how convergence produces shared attractors, how environments become collective memory surfaces, and how coordination emerges without commands, feeds, or negotiation layers.
This introduces a new condition:
The social convergence chain is:
RFL-3 therefore formalizes the transition by which relational infrastructure ceases to remain purely personal and begins to stabilize as shared ambient environment.
Core claim
Social coherence emerges when individual relational fields synchronize through shared environments, allowing collective attractors to form without requiring identity, messaging, or centralized coordination.
Eissens, R. (2026). RFL-3 — Social Field Convergence: How relational fields synchronize into shared ambient environments (1.0). Zenodo.