Scale separation
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Scale separation is the organizational principle by which processes operating at different speeds, sizes, or complexities are partially decoupled into distinct layers, each with its own dynamics and characteristic timescale. It is the structural precondition for cross-scale interactions: without separation, there is only one scale and no architecture; with too much separation, scales become isolated and the system loses coherence. The degree of separation — measured by the ratio of timescales, the strength of coupling, or the transparency of boundaries — is itself a design variable that determines whether a system is rigid, resilient, or fragmented.
See also Cross-scale interactions, Panarchy, Adaptive Cycle, Complex Adaptive Systems.