Curtiss Convergence
Definition
The Curtiss Convergence is the framework’s most important contemporary cross-tradition mapping: an independent derivation by another author that arrived at the same 22-archetype structure with substantially the same characterizations. Curtiss’s work was developed independently of Chris’s and predates much of the framework’s documentation, yet the convergence is deep enough to be load-bearing evidence that the architecture is discoverable (not idiosyncratic to one mind).
22 atomic Curtiss documents are stored in curtiss/ for one-to-one comparison with each of the framework’s archetypes.
Cross-References
- All 22 Archetype nodes — each may reference Curtiss’s parallel articulation
- Treatise_22_Step_Sequence — the structure both derivations describe
Canon Narratives
- corpus:
curtiss/THEMATIC_CONVERGENCES.md— convergence analysis - corpus:
curtiss/archetype_NN_*.mdfor each of the 22 archetypes