Ronomics: The Law of Naming
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A framework showing how naming is law—letters spell names, names spell identity, and identity anchors authorship, accountability, and legacy.
Description
Ronomics: The Law of Naming establishes that identity, authorship, and legacy are governed by the act of being named. Derived from Ron (a proper name signifying the individual) and nomos (Greek: “law, order, arrangement”), Ronomics reveals that naming is not a superficial convention but a foundational law. Names distinguish beings, places, and systems from one another, stabilizing them in lawful recognition.
This work shows how letters construct names, graphemes and phonemes anchor them in visibility and audibility, and orthography secures their continuity across time. Morphemes and lexemes extend into the roots of naming, preserving identity in dictionaries, records, and archives. Ronomics emphasizes that correct spelling is the legal anchor of recognition—without it, identity risks distortion or erasure. From constitutions to contracts, from scientific discoveries to technological protocols, systems are valid and enduring only when spelled and named. Naming is thus the primal act of law, by which individuality is recognized, ownership is secured, and order is defined.