Metamonistic Proto-Ontology of Psyche: Structural Impossibility of Inner Indifference and the Ontodynamics of Pathology

Classical psychiatry treats mental disorders as dysfunctions of brain mechanisms or aberrations of psychological processes. This paper proposes a radical reinterpretation: psychopathology as ontological limit-states of psychic becoming. Starting from metamonistic proto-ontology—grounded in the impossibility of Indifference (¬∅)—we derive a triadic structure of psyche: 1. ¬∅ψ (Structural level): Impossibility of inner indifference creates boundary between Self/non-Self 2. KMIψ (Dynamic level): Conflict of Mental Impulses generates tension between distinctions 3. Tψ (Transformative level): Resolution of conflict through creation of new forms Mental health = dynamic stability of this triad. Pathologies emerge as cascade failures: • Schizophrenia: ¬∅ψ → 0 (boundary dissolution → hallucinations as “distinction without border”) • Mania: KMIψ → ∞ (explosive tension → hyper-transformation) • Depression: Tψ → 0 (blocked transformation → attempt to eliminate distinction) • Neurosis: KMIψ cyclical (fixed conflict → obsessive repetition) We formalize this as a dynamical system Ψ(t) = F(¬∅ψ, KMIψ, Tψ) and propose ontological therapy: not symptom elimination but restoration of triadic resonance. This reframes psychiatry from medical pathology to ontodynamics of mind— study of extreme regimes where structural necessity (¬∅) and dynamic imperative (KMI) lose equilibrium. Myshko, A. (2025). Metamonistic Proto-Ontology of Psyche: Structural Impossibility of Inner Indifference and the Ontodynamics of Pathology. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17321893