In Mutation, Becoming is a work of philosophical literature written from within a world where stability has ceased to be the ground of existence. It does not treat mutation as an external shock to be managed, nor as a historical exception. Mutation is presented as the ordinary condition of being-where forms loosen, relations thicken, and existence reveals its generative nature. At the center of the book stands SIO Ontology-Subject, Interaction, and Object-not as an abstract model, but as a rethinking of what it means to exist. In this view, neither subject nor object precedes relation. Existence itself unfolds through interaction, and interaction is the site where structure, direction, and endurance arise. Being is not a fixed substance but a continuous formation, shaped by constraint, resonance, and transformation. Within this ontological horizon, the book articulates the Meaning Trinity-the Feature Law, the Freedom Law, and the Happiness Law.
Despite its name, the Meaning Trinity does not describe how meaning is produced. It expresses the inner logic by which existence comes into form. The Feature Law concerns the emergence of distinction within undifferentiated flux, where existence first acquires contour. The Freedom Law names the opening of pathways under pressure, where being gains direction without predetermination. The Happiness Law refers to the re-stabilization of existence, when tension is transformed into a livable rhythm rather than eliminated. Together, these laws describe not interpretation, but the structural dynamics of becoming itself. The book unfolds across three interwoven movements-life, art, and philosophical reflection. In life, mutation appears as memory, loss, acceleration, and endurance.
In art, it becomes perceptible as form, rupture, and aesthetic tension. In philosophy, it is approached as an ontological necessity rather than a problem to be solved. In Mutation, Becoming does not offer conclusions or prescriptions. It accompanies the reader through chaos, entanglement, and tension, allowing existence to be encountered as it happens. This is not a book about overcoming instability, but about remaining present where being continues to take shape.