Current Equation
A clean, interpretable linear objective in which informational contribution, local organisation, and viability are balanced against complexity or crowding cost.
This page outlines the next major development direction for Telos: extending the current linear telic model into a nonlinear formulation where information, structure, energy, and complexity do not merely accumulate but interact.
The aim is to deepen the simulator's capacity to produce sharper attractors, richer phase transitions, and more meaningful emergent organisation while preserving the clarity and interpretability of the original framework.
The current Telos formulation treats information, local structure, energy, and complexity as independently weighted contributors. The proposed extension introduces a coupling term so the value of information rises when it is embedded inside organised local structure.
A clean, interpretable linear objective in which informational contribution, local organisation, and viability are balanced against complexity or crowding cost.
The new coupling term rewards coherent organised information, allowing structure and information to reinforce each other rather than acting as isolated signals.
In many real complex systems, order becomes meaningful when components interact. Information on its own is weak. Structure on its own can be rigid. Together, they create coherent, persistent organisation.
The coupling coefficient λ determines how strongly informational content and local structure reinforce one another. Small values preserve continuity with the linear model while still revealing richer geometry in the telic landscape.
The landscape becomes more rugged and expressive, with clearer basins, stronger regime separation, and more distinctive attractor-like outcomes across repeated runs.
The nonlinear extension turns Telos into a stronger laboratory for exploring how organised information stabilises, collapses, or transitions under local pressure, mutation, and resource constraints.
A further development path introduces a second interaction term to discourage brittle, overly dense structural states and preserve adaptive flexibility.
Here, λ rewards coherent organised information while μ penalises rigid structure when complexity or crowding becomes excessive. This creates a stronger balance between coordination and flexibility.
The proposed development is intentionally incremental. Telos can adopt the nonlinear extension without losing continuity with its current formulation or archive structure.
Introduce a configurable coupling coefficient to the simulator interface and archive schema.
During telic evaluation, calculate IΦ and include it in the score calculation for each agent decision.
Record the coupling contribution alongside existing metrics so archived runs can be compared rigorously.
Compare the current linear model against Telos v2 across λ, γ, temperature, and mutation ranges.
Use the archive to identify regimes such as chaotic exploration, structured clustering, symbolic monoculture, and metastable diversity.
This page can be linked directly from the Telos landing page as a living reference for model evolution, research direction, and implementation priorities inside Blue Whale.