Convergence Edge 3: Symmetry ↔ Conservation ↔ Duality / Complementarity
C03 (Symmetry ↔ Conservation) recurs-with C14 (Duality / Complementarity)
Shared pattern: Fundamental quantities come in opposed, mutually-defining pairs; the structure of reality is dyadic
Domain distance: Mathematical physics → Philosophy/Psychology/Theology (maximum)
Derivation independence: EXTREMELY HIGH. Noether (mathematics, 1918) proved the theorem from invariant variational problems. Bohr (physics, 1928) developed complementarity from quantum experiments. Heraclitus (philosophy, ~500 BCE) observed opposition in nature. Taoism (religion, ~6th c. BCE) derived yin-yang from natural cycles. Jung (psychology, 1951) observed psychic opposites clinically. Five civilizations, three millennia, zero borrowing.
Convergence strength (1–10): 9
Note: This is the strongest convergence in the catalogue. The duality pattern is not domain-specific — it is cross-domain structural.
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Corpus map
- C03 (Symmetry ↔ Conservation): C03 in the Encyclopedia · C03 in the Catalogue
- C14 (Duality / Complementarity): C14 in the Encyclopedia · C14 in the Catalogue
- Convergence edges: 1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · 10
- Catalogue hub: Convergence Catalogue — Public Article · The Schema