Solving the Identity Problem
Does nature have an identity? Where does identity come from?

You can change your identity by changing your name. Or, your friends. Or, your partner. Name, friends, partner, associate an identity with you, and, vice versa.
So, where does identity come from? Complementarity is the basis for identity. All systems and disciplines. Meaning, identification is dependent on negation, and, also, duplication.
Complementarity is the base identity for negation. And, also, duplication. That is X and X’ is dependent on negation, and, also, duplication (the self-sufficient state).
So, where do negation, and duplication, come from?
Negation, and duplication, are dependent on the number ‘two.’ So, what we are really asking, is, where does the number two come from? This is easier, and also, more complex, than it sounds.
Zero and one is X and Y. X and Y define a circle. There is a mandatory line between an X and Y, turning any line into a circle (the diameter of a circle). No matter where the line begins and ends, even if it never ends (or begins), the line is always both diameter, and circumference, of a circle.
This explains complementarity, identity, negation, duplication, and, also, conservation (existence in general). The number ‘two.’ In general.
Conservation of the circle is the core dynamic in nature.


