The latest Ken Theory™ trilogy (Papers #132–#134)
has now been published on the official site in both Japanese and English.
This trilogy structurally rejects the conventional treatment of time, space, and memory as:
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pre-given backgrounds,
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neutral containers, or
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mechanisms for storing information.
Instead, it reconstructs a minimal civilizational architecture:
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Time as the generative structure through which responsibility is fixed by observation (#132)
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Space as the preservation structure that prevents responsibility from fracturing (#133)
These are not independent concepts.
Together, they form an irreducible triad required for responsibility to exist, persist, and be inherited within civilization.
Without time, responsibility cannot be fixed.
Without space, responsibility fragments.
Without memory as verification, responsibility collapses into belief or myth.
This trilogy offers a structural answer to persistent questions such as:
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Why records alone do not guarantee truth
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Why institutions can persist while responsibility disappears
Civilization does not endure because it remembers.
It endures because responsibility can be verified.