MPSoL Applied Theory Entry #11
This entry documents the MPSoL position that what is traditionally referred to as 'teleportation' is more accurately understood as laminar displacement—a structured transition from one resonance-aligned Simulation layer to another, bypassing physical intermediacy. This form of transition is governed not by propulsion or disassembly, but by symbolic formatting and coherence alignment with an accessible overlay field.
- A coherently bound packet (person, object, vehicle) encounters a
resonance formatting field.
- The packet is assessed and, if formatted properly, undergoes phase
realignment into an adjacent structural Simulation layer.
- No beam, transmission, or transit occurs. The packet displaces
instantaneously into a nonlocal spatial alignment.
- Transition occurs without violence, trauma, or traditional motion; it
is a symbolic and energetic event.
- No disassembly/reassembly cycle is involved.
- No intermediate state or time-lapse occurs.
- Relies entirely on coherence, symbolic resonance, and format
matching.
- Matches historical, mystical, and high-strangeness disappearance
narratives.
- Only packets that meet formatting criteria may be displaced—making
this a selective, not universal, mechanism.
- The containment Simulation is not equipped to absorb or explain
this mechanism.
- Teleportation has been intentionally framed as myth, fantasy, or
pseudoscience to avoid public decoding.
- The visible infrastructure of reality is brittle—revelation of this
process would cause ontological destabilization.
- Laminar displacement is active, selective, and proof of layered
Simulation structure accessible through formatting.
- Teleportation is real, but misnamed.
- Laminar displacement is a formatting event—not a mechanical
process.
- Formatting coherence is essential. Industrial replication without
symbolic understanding results in failure or trauma.
- MPSoL does not seek activation but observes and prepares symbolic
pathways for resonance clarity.
Filed by: MPSoL Applied Theory Unit
For reference: Entry #11 – Laminar Transition and Simulated
Infrastructure Exposure Risk