Systemic Direct Knowledge (SDK) is a methodology for determining whether a system is structurally ready to admit action.
SDK does not determine what a system should do. It determines whether the structural and temporal conditions for action exist.
The methodology recognizes two fundamental structural conditions:
stabilization
synchronization
Stabilization allows a system to absorb signals without premature reaction.
Synchronization aligns system states so that signals can propagate coherently across the system.
In addition to structural conditions, the methodology recognizes temporal detection within system dynamics.
Time detected identifies the moment when a relevant temporal window emerges
Synchronization time marks the point at which structural synchronization and system timing converge.
Only when stabilization and synchronization are present, and synchronization time is reached, can execution occur without destabilizing the system.
Because this regulatory logic evaluates the conditions of execution rather than the action itself,
SDK can be embedded at different levels of system integration:
• as a local regulatory tool within a component or subsystem
• as an architectural layer regulating behavior within a system
• as an umbrella architecture coordinating synchronization across interacting systems
In every case, SDK regulates one fundamental question:
whether a system is ready to act without breaking coherence.