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Íàéíîâ³øèé òâ³ð
Dichton: The Principle of Dynamic Coherence
I How Local Harmony Becomes a Contour of Metaharmony

The Image of the Work: From a Creative Method to an Aesthetic–Philosophical Category

The foundation of traditional artistic creation, in most cases, is the aspiration toward an integral unity—whether expressed through a single dominant image or through polyphony—culminating in a harmonious completion. Music seeks cadence, poetry seeks a final image, and thought seeks a clear conclusion.

Yet there exists another mode of artistic creation in which completion is not the ultimate goal and final harmony is not regarded as an absolute state.

This approach may be described as the Dichton method: an artistic mode in which two dynamic currents—the current of meaning and the current of form, the explicit and the implicit—coexist simultaneously. These currents neither merge completely nor negate one another. Instead, through their sustained interaction they generate a new quality of artistic expression and perception.

Before developing this concept further, several fundamental terms require clarification.

Integrity is the state of an artistic work in which all of its elements—form, content, colour, rhythm, and idea—are so profoundly interconnected that they function as a single living organism.

Polyphony likewise occupies an essential place in the arts. Despite its many variations, it remains directed toward an overall compositional unity, even when that unity possesses a choral or multi-voiced character. Within artistic practice, polyphony is the simultaneous development of several independent yet equally significant voices or lines, each preserving its own individuality while contributing to a coherent whole. It creates a richly layered artistic texture composed of relatively homogeneous structures. At the same time, the perception of such works demands from the listener or reader what might be called a polyphonic ear—the ability to perceive several equally important streams at once.

The concept introduced in this essay extends beyond both monolithic unity and classical polyphony. It proposes another principle of artistic organisation, one in which harmony remains open rather than closed, dynamic rather than final, and oriented toward a larger field of coherence beyond the boundaries of the individual work.

II Dichton Duality

At this point, the creative spectrum reveals what may be understood as a continuation of both monolithic unity and polyphony: Dichton duality.

At first glance, it appears to represent a transition from the relatively homogeneous equality of a work's structural elements toward a more complex and dynamic mode of artistic existence. The paradox, however, is that this dynamism unfolds precisely through duality—through the simultaneous existence of what is explicitly manifested and what remains implicitly present, of ideas and directions that are not directly stated or rigidly defined.

This concerns not merely the coexistence of identifiable meanings, but the dynamic interaction within a Dichton artefact between intention and realization, between form and creative orientation. Such a work is inherently more fluid, more energetically charged, operating simultaneously within multiple experiential spaces that are brought together into a single compositional dynamic. It deliberately avoids complete and final closure so that, ideally, it may be perceived as a living fragment of something greater—a living reality that ultimately remains beyond complete expression.

Every reader or listener naturally develops personal reflections in response to a work of art. Within Dichton duality, however, these individual reflections occupy a somewhat different position. This is primarily because the boundaries between the author's intentions are intentionally left unfixed, allowing an entire spectrum of leading ideas and multiple pathways for semantic openness in language—or in any other artistic medium—to emerge.

As a result, the same work may legitimately be performed or interpreted in different ways. The essential condition is that none of these realizations violate the spectrum of harmonious relationships embedded within the work during its creation. Consequently, every new encounter with the work becomes a genuinely different experience from the previous one.

Naturally, this approach requires readers and listeners who are more sensitive to artistic nuance and subtlety. It therefore appeals to a smaller and often more demanding audience. Yet it is precisely in this manner—beginning from relatively small circles—that genuinely new artistic spaces are capable of emerging, and this is of fundamental importance.

Proceeding further, we may therefore propose that, in poetry for example, Dichton duality is not merely a particular form of rhythmic language. It is equally the presence of a coherent current of interconnected meanings that directs the inherent ambiguities of language toward multiple semantic trajectories, since words and expressions frequently possess more than one meaning. Most importantly, this process unfolds within permissible harmonious limits in service of a constructive whole that extends beyond the individual work itself. The same principle may also be applied to prose, music, and other forms of artistic expression.

Fundamental harmony is neither predetermined nor ever attained in its final form. It can only be approached. This reveals the central principle of Dichton: the essential impossibility of achieving complete harmonious closure within an individual work or any closed artistic system.

This implies:

• the absence of a final resolution;
• the avoidance of complete formal closure;
• the preservation of creative tension.

Works of this nature should not proclaim, "Here is the truth." Rather, they should sustain the sense that "Here is the movement toward it."

More broadly, the Dichton approach opens new possibilities.

For the author:

• there is no necessity to prove the unambiguity of an idea;
• it becomes possible to construct entire spectra of complexity;
• it becomes possible to work with multiple interconnected levels that extend
beyond the boundaries of a single composition.

For the work itself:

• it cannot be exhausted by a single reading;
• it cannot be reduced to a single interpretation.

For the reader or listener:

• a genuine space of co-creation emerges;
• every act of perception becomes a new realization of the work.

It is precisely this incompleteness of the individual work, understood within the context of something greater beyond itself, that produces the principal effect: the expansion of the spectrum of possible interpretations.

Whereas classical harmony presupposes a correct performance and a correct interpretation, within Dichton every performance is necessarily one possible realization, and every individual understanding is consciously partial.

The work therefore appears not as a finished object but as a field of possibilities. It is precisely in this openness that its Dichton nature is revealed.

At the same time, it is essential to perceive the boundary separating chaos from structured form. Dichton is not chaos. If its currents cease to interact, the structure disintegrates. If they merge completely, it ceases to be Dichton.

Dichton exists only where tension between the interacting currents is maintained—sometimes delicately, sometimes fluctuatingly, yet always harmoniously. This boundary is extraordinarily subtle. In its broader sense, Dichton reflects the lived experience of existence itself:

• we simultaneously exist both outside ourselves and within ourselves;
• we experience both form and meaning as dynamic processes;
• we live within time while sensing something beyond time.

In practical terms, a Dichton work possesses four defining characteristics:

1. It contains two interconnected yet autonomous dynamics—the explicit and
the implicit.
2. These dynamics never fully merge.
3. Their interaction does not conclude with the final line or the final note
of the work.
4. Harmonies existing beyond the work itself generate the experience
of metaharmony.

Dichton is not merely an artistic technique; it is also a model of consciousness.

As a creative method, it has the capacity both to complement and to complete the achievements of classical artistic traditions as well as those of modernism, including postmodernism. In its fully developed form as a systematic artistic principle, Dichton can incorporate, whenever appropriate to a particular work, characteristic features of various established styles while nevertheless preserving its own identity as a participant in metaharmony.

For this reason, Dichton should be understood not only as a creative method but also as a broader aesthetic–philosophical category describing the organization of open wholes through the sustained tension between two interconnected currents. Within art, this category manifests itself as a corresponding method of constructing the work itself.

III Why the Term “Dichton”?

The term Dichton is formed from two Greek roots: διχῆ (dicha), meaning in two, apart, or doubly, and τόνος (tonos), meaning tension, strain, or tone. Their combination expresses not merely the existence of duality, but a duality maintained in a state of dynamic tension and simultaneous presence. It signifies neither separation nor fusion, but rather the sustained interaction of two principles whose relationship is never fully resolved.

For this reason, Dichton proves more precise than other possible designations. It refers not simply to the presence of two concurrent currents, but to their structural tension as the very condition through which artistic creation becomes possible.

The term also carries a natural semantic association with breathing. Breathing itself is a dual act—inhale and exhale. These two movements never merge into one, yet neither can exist independently. Only together do they constitute the living process of respiration.

In a similar way, a Dichton work functions through a comparable rhythm. The inhale corresponds to internal structuring, concentration, and the formation of interconnected meanings. The exhale opens the work outward, extending it into a broader field of experience and placing it within a larger context. Artistic material—whether word, sound, colour, form, or individual meaning—passes through this dual cycle. It does not conclude within the boundaries of the work itself but continues into a greater whole.

Thus, Dichton signifies not merely duality, but a dynamically coordinated duality sustained in creative tension, one that refuses closure and remains directed toward metaharmony.

It is precisely this openness that makes Dichton more than an artistic device. It becomes a general principle governing the organization of open wholes. Such wholes are founded upon a dynamic two-current structure whose unresolved tension extends beyond itself, ultimately entering the broader contour of metaharmony.

Expressed almost as a formula:

Dichton = dual-current structure + sustained tension + incompleteness + orientation toward metaharmony



Theoretically, one may also assume the existence of a Polychton—a structure in which multiple Dichton channels coexist simultaneously.

Within such a system, each individual channel preserves its own dual-current tension while at the same time participating in a broader contour of metaharmony.

The result is not a simple mosaic of independent elements, but a multidimensional coherent structure that allows multiple points of entry and multiple trajectories of perception.

At the same time, maintaining such a plurality of interacting tensions requires a level of integration that exceeds ordinary cognitive modes.

If Dichton may therefore be understood as the minimal coherent structure sustained by dynamic tension, then Polychton, as its hypothetical extension, represents a network of such structures whose coherence is preserved across multiple interacting channels.

IV Dichton as the Fullness of Minus-Entropy and Plus-Entropy

Here we consider Dichton not merely as a creative or artistic approach, but as an aesthetic, ethical, and philosophical category. To understand it adequately, one must also take into account the fundamental energetic processes of reality, supplemented by the principles of guidance and self-guidance. The well-known formula expressing the law of the conservation of harmony, E ⊙ K = const, refers precisely to this relationship.
The law of conservation of harmony E⊙K=const, E - energy, K - control, ⊙ - coherent interaction (Lyashkevych V.)

Accordingly, the discussion always concerns the interplay between kinetic activity and potentiality. Wherever energy and its associated processes exist, entropy is inevitably involved as well.

The original meaning of entropy, however, is considerably broader than its contemporary usage, which is generally restricted to kinetic processes and physical interactions involving the dissipation of energy. In such contexts, entropy indeed describes dispersion. Yet, in its fuller conceptual sense, entropy may be understood as change within a system itself—changes that include not only decay, but also the possibility of acquisition, growth, and transformation.

For this reason, we propose the following distinction.

Minus-Entropy (Kinetic Dimension)

Minus-entropy represents the energy of decomposition, chaos, and the dissolution of established forms. Such processes belong not only to nature itself but also to artistic creation, where they frequently play an essential role.

Postmodernism, for example—the most recent major artistic orientation preceding the concept of Dichton—may be understood as having immersed itself almost entirely in this dimension, becoming, in many respects, a mirror of disintegration.

Within this framework, minus-entropy denotes changes that lead toward simplification, fragmentation, and the dissipation of existing structures.

Plus-Entropy (Potential Dimension)

Plus-entropy, by contrast, concerns the possibility of increasing potential within higher dimensions of existence.

It expresses the capacity of a system—or of the human self—to undergo internal change without merely collapsing, instead evolving toward a higher level of complexity and organization.

Plus-entropy therefore represents the harmonious accumulation not only of self-regulating capacity but also of creative tension.

Dichton as a Vector Toward the Future

Dichton is not simply a balanced combination of minus and plus. Rather, it is the simultaneous maintenance of both entropic processes within a single coherent field of awareness and natural interaction.

The art of the future cannot remain confined to pure classicism, for classical harmony often overlooks the reality of dissolution and decay. Nor can it remain within postmodernism—or any comparable condition of fragmentation or excessive simplification—in which no upward developmental vector is preserved.

What emerges within this balanced field?

Interaction Through the Self

The human being becomes precisely that medium through which the kinetics of disintegration calls forth the necessity of an alternative—a potential creative act.

Our Self observes the world's minus-entropy. Yet instead of dissolving into it, it transforms that experience into a catalyst for plus-entropic growth—for example, what is commonly described as spiritual development.

An Aesthetic-Ethical Synthesis

Dichton restores broader dimensions to ethics and aesthetics within art, creativity, and philosophy.

If we acknowledge that internal transformation may increase potential rather than merely produce decay, artistic creation becomes a responsible act of choosing between chaos and the emergence of new structure around it.

Ultimately, this process generates additional forms, meanings, and deeper harmony within those higher realities capable of preserving and developing themselves.

A Long-Existing Yet Unnamed Principle

Processes of this kind have long been present in numerous works of art, philosophy, and even science.

What has been lacking is not the phenomenon itself but a sufficiently clear conceptual description.

The purpose of the present study is therefore to articulate this principle more explicitly.

Accordingly, Dichton may also be understood as a way of overcoming both the so-called "death of the author" and the "death of art." It restores a dynamic conception of harmony in which beauty and meaningfulness are neither static—as they often appear within classical aesthetics—nor reduced to one-sided, simplified dynamics characteristic of many modernist tendencies.

Neither does it treat change as an end in itself, as frequently occurs within modernist movements dominated by minus-entropic processes.

Instead, Dichton proposes a new developmental vector directed toward higher growth while acknowledging the continual dissolution of everything that cannot ultimately be sustained.

The Place of Dichton Among Aesthetic Categories

If Dichton may be regarded as an independent aesthetic–ethical–philosophical category, it is appropriate to consider its place within the broader system of such categories and the meanings they convey.

In general, aesthetic–philosophical categories do not constitute a closed or fixed list. Rather, they form an open conceptual system that has continually expanded throughout the history of philosophy and aesthetics.

Nevertheless, this system possesses a relatively stable core.

The Classical Core

Across different intellectual traditions—from Antiquity to modern philosophy—a broadly similar group of fundamental categories consistently reappears:

beauty;
the sublime;
the tragic;
the comic;
the ugly;
harmony;
measure;
form;
content.

Depending upon the philosophical tradition, this core usually consists of approximately eight to twelve fundamental categories.

These categories are:

universal in scope;
repeatedly reinterpreted throughout intellectual history;
and serve as the fundamental coordinate system of aesthetics.

Expansion in Modern Aesthetics

Beginning in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, aesthetics gradually introduced additional categories that refined or extended the classical framework.

Among them are:

irony;
the absurd;
the grotesque;
kitsch;
authenticity;
alienation;
deconstruction.

Unlike the classical core, these do not form a fixed or universally accepted list. Their number continues to expand as aesthetic theory develops.

Not All Categories Belong to the Same Level

An important distinction must therefore be made between different kinds of aesthetic categories.

Some are foundational (ontological). They describe fundamental modes of aesthetic existence itself—for example, beauty or the tragic.

Others are derivative (analytical). These describe artistic styles, expressive effects, or creative techniques—for example, the grotesque or kitsch.

Where Does Dichton Belong?

Dichton does not belong to the same conceptual class as categories such as beauty or the tragic.

Instead, it belongs to a different level altogether: the level of categories of organization.

Rather than describing a particular aesthetic quality or emotional experience, Dichton describes:

the structural organization of an artistic work;
the mode of interaction among multiple currents of meaning;
the process through which harmony is generated and maintained.

In this respect, Dichton stands closest to the concept of harmony, although harmony understood here as an ongoing dynamic process rather than as a static condition.

It also approaches the concept of form, though not as a finished configuration but as a continuously unfolding process.

How Many Categories Like Dichton Exist?

In fact, very few structural categories of this kind have been defined with conceptual precision.

There have been individual attempts, including:

dialectics, expressed through the relationship between thesis and antithesis;
polyphony in artistic theory;
the concept of the open work developed within modern aesthetics.

Yet each of these remains either incomplete or insufficiently developed as a rigorous general category capable of describing the structural organization of open artistic wholes.

This leads to an important conclusion.

Dichton presents itself as the formation of a genuinely new structural category.

Accordingly, Dichton should not be understood as merely another category alongside beauty, the sublime, or the tragic.

Rather, it belongs to a different conceptual order altogether: a category that describes the very mode through which aesthetic reality is organized.

It is precisely this organizational function that distinguishes Dichton from both traditional aesthetic categories and purely artistic methods, allowing it to serve simultaneously as an aesthetic principle, a philosophical concept, and a creative methodology.

Examples of Dichton in Artistic Creation

The principles discussed above may perhaps be demonstrated most clearly through examples drawn from poetry and music, although Dichton is by no means confined to these forms. It is equally applicable to prose, painting, philosophy, and even mathematics. Indeed, countless works across different fields may be understood as fundamentally Dichtonic, even though they have never been identified as such.

The present study does not claim to establish an entirely new artistic phenomenon. Rather, it seeks to articulate more clearly a mode of organization that has long existed in creative practice, providing a more precise conceptual framework and terminology for processes that artists have often employed intuitively.

The following examples should therefore be regarded not as illustrations of an abstract theory imposed upon artistic works, but as demonstrations of how Dichton may reveal itself in practice. Each example embodies, in its own way, the coexistence of explicit and implicit currents, the preservation of unresolved creative tension, and the orientation of the work beyond its own formal boundaries toward a broader field of metaharmony.

The examples presented here are not intended as definitive models. They merely illustrate one possible realization of the Dichton principle. Different authors, artistic traditions, and creative media may embody the same structural principle in entirely different ways while preserving its essential characteristics.



For example, the poem "Seize the Moment", in which the author tried to adhere to a similar dichotomy.

Seize the Fleeting Moment

Fragile snowflakes, winter's quiet grace,
the old and the new wrapped in one embrace;
a lantern sways along a narrow lane,
immersed in terracotta and in white.

The waves of Christmas carols drift beyond the windowpanes;
a murmur fills the sky above the festive candles;
anxiety lingers over welcoming harmonies—
like chords offered to the gifts of Jesus.

And then the stars of another time appear: between
the measured beating of a trembling tower clock,
beyond the gently wavering bounds of Christmas Eve,
from eternity toward our familiar crossroads.

Divided into two lives—
one turned outward, the other within—
I stand beneath the falling snow,
captivated by a sudden carpe diem
in an age whose future no one knows.

How many times has all this happened before?
The same snow. The same footprints leading nowhere.
As much rejoicing as illusion,
one more step—and everything behind is covered over.

Yet still there is the heartbeat,
the living streams of earth,
these snowflakes descending from unknown heights,
and the inexpressible hope of Christmas—
above all that slowly melts into the distance.




Dichton Analysis

Explicit Current

The explicit current presents the visible reality of the poem: winter, snow, Christmas Eve, lantern light, Christmas carols, candles, the tower clock, and the lyrical observer standing within this familiar landscape. These images establish a coherent external world that can be perceived without further interpretation.

Implicit Current

Beneath the visible narrative unfolds a second movement. Time gradually transforms into eternity; memory intersects with expectation; the Christmas celebration becomes a symbol of spiritual renewal; and the individual moment opens toward a reality that transcends immediate experience. The poem therefore speaks simultaneously about a winter evening and about the existential condition of human existence.

Field of Tension

The central Dichton tension arises between temporality and eternity.

The visible world continually dissolves into transient experience, while the invisible world remains permanently present without becoming fully accessible. Neither dimension dominates the other. Their coexistence creates a dynamic equilibrium in which the poem remains intentionally open rather than concluding with a single definitive meaning.

A second field of tension emerges between external perception and inner contemplation. The lyrical voice simultaneously inhabits both dimensions, allowing the poem to unfold along two complementary semantic trajectories.

Structural Openness

The poem deliberately resists complete semantic closure. Its concluding images do not resolve the tensions established throughout the work but preserve them as active possibilities for further reflection. Consequently, every new reading may reveal additional relationships among its symbols and meanings without exhausting the poem's interpretative potential.

This openness is not a sign of incompleteness but a structural characteristic of Dichton itself. The work remains artistically complete while conceptually open.

Metaharmonic Orientation

The poem does not culminate in closure. Instead, it directs the reader beyond itself.

Its concluding images leave the external narrative unfinished while opening a broader horizon of reflection. The Christmas landscape becomes only the visible threshold of a larger spiritual reality, and the fleeting moment acquires significance because it participates in an order extending beyond time itself.

From the perspective of Dichton, this movement beyond the boundaries of the individual work constitutes its orientation toward metaharmony.

Dichton Principle Demonstrated

This poem demonstrates that an artistic work may achieve structural completeness without semantic finality. Its explicit and implicit currents remain in continuous interaction, preserving a dynamic field of tension that extends beyond the work itself.

Rather than presenting a definitive conclusion, the poem invites the reader into an ongoing process of perception in which each encounter may disclose new relationships between temporality and eternity, the visible and the invisible, experience and transcendence. In this way, the work exemplifies the fundamental principle of Dichton: harmony is not a closed state but an open movement toward metaharmony.




The Power of Witchcraft

Forsaken by seers,
hidden deep within the thickets,

dwelling in burrows and nests,
at the edge of the ravens' realm;

steeped in green moss,
woven through tangled branches,

infused by waters,
ripened upon last year's leaves,

held fast by roots,
nourished by light,

caressed by darkness,
anointed drop by drop—

neither a secret
nor a weapon for a warrior.

Dichton Analysis

Explicit Current


The poem evokes an ancient landscape in which the force of witchcraft is inseparable from the natural world. Thickets, burrows, nests, ravens, moss, intertwined branches, water, fallen leaves, roots, light, and darkness together form a coherent symbolic environment. Rather than describing magical actions, the poem presents the conditions through which an unnamed power comes into being.

Each image remains concrete and tangible. The poem therefore unfolds through a sequence of visible natural forms whose cumulative rhythm creates an atmosphere of quiet expectancy.

Implicit Current

Beyond the physical imagery lies a deeper current concerning the origin and character of primordial power.

The force described is neither human nor supernatural in a conventional sense. Instead, it appears as an intrinsic property of existence itself, emerging wherever the fundamental elements of nature interact in harmonious tension.

The concluding statement transforms the entire poem. What initially appears to concern witchcraft gradually reveals itself as a meditation on power that cannot be possessed, weaponized, or reduced to hidden knowledge. The poem therefore shifts from folklore toward ontology.

Field of Tension

The primary Dichton tension is established between concealment and revelation.

The force remains hidden within nature while simultaneously manifesting itself through every natural image. It is present everywhere yet never directly exposed.

A second field of tension unfolds between light and darkness. Neither principle is granted superiority. Light nourishes the hidden force, while darkness embraces and protects it. Their interaction generates a balanced polarity rather than a moral opposition.

A third tension emerges between human intention and natural autonomy. The poem refuses to place this primordial force under human control. It exists independently of human ambition, remaining inaccessible to domination or instrumental use.

Structural Openness

The poem deliberately withholds explanation.

It neither defines the nature of the power nor identifies its ultimate source. Instead, the sequence of images invites the reader to approach an intuition that cannot be fully translated into conceptual language.

The final declaration—"neither a secret nor a weapon for a warrior"—does not resolve the preceding imagery. Rather, it redirects interpretation, encouraging the reader to reconsider every earlier image from a broader philosophical perspective.

The poem therefore remains structurally complete while preserving an open horizon of meaning.

Metaharmonic Orientation

The movement of the poem extends beyond the theme of witchcraft itself.

Nature is presented not as a collection of isolated objects but as a coherent field whose visible forms participate in a deeper order of relationships. The hidden force belongs to that larger order rather than to any individual element within it.

Consequently, the poem directs the reader toward an understanding of harmony that transcends both mythological symbolism and literal description. The natural world becomes the visible expression of an invisible coherence that continually exceeds the limits of language.

Within the framework of Dichton, this orientation toward an inexhaustible order constitutes the poem's movement toward metaharmony.

Dichton Principle Demonstrated

This poem demonstrates that Dichton may arise through the interaction of symbolic accumulation rather than narrative development.

Its explicit current constructs a tangible natural landscape, while its implicit current gradually reveals a philosophical meditation on the nature of primordial power. Neither current absorbs the other; both remain simultaneously active throughout the work.

The poem ultimately affirms that genuine power does not reside in domination, secrecy, or possession. Instead, it emerges from participation in a living order that remains greater than any individual act of perception or expression. In this sustained interaction between visible nature and invisible coherence, the poem exemplifies one of the central principles of Dichton: harmony is discovered not through resolution, but through the enduring dynamic tension between complementary realities.




Diaries

And trains keep rushing into the unknown,

toward countless stations
along the turning circles of destiny.

Relentlessly you change from one to another,

and sometimes even while they are still moving—

from one life into the next,

from one destiny into another,

again and again,

until, quite suddenly,

you are carried back,

as though returning to childhood,

upon the fragile sail

of a drifting spider's thread.




For example, the poem "Diaries", in which the author tried to adhere to a similar dichotomy

Dichton Analysis
Explicit Current


The poem presents the familiar image of railway travel. Trains rush toward unknown destinations, stopping at different stations, while the traveller continually changes from one train to another. The movement appears ordinary and recognizable, reflecting the experience of physical travel through space.

The final image introduces an unexpected shift: the traveller is suddenly carried back toward childhood upon the fragile sail of a drifting spider's thread. Despite its dreamlike quality, this image remains firmly rooted within the poem's unfolding sequence.

Implicit Current

Beneath the literal journey unfolds a meditation on the continuous transformation of human existence.

The trains gradually cease to represent transportation alone. They become successive lives, changing identities, choices, memories, and destinies through which the individual continually passes. Every transfer from one train to another simultaneously signifies a transition from one existential condition to the next.

The unexpected return to childhood introduces a further dimension. Memory is no longer presented as recollection alone but as an active movement capable of transcending chronological time. The journey therefore unfolds simultaneously through physical space, lived experience, and inner consciousness.

Field of Tension

The primary Dichton tension exists between external movement and inner continuity.

Outwardly, the traveller constantly changes direction, trains, and destinations. Inwardly, however, a deeper continuity remains present, binding together every transition into a single human life.

A second field of tension emerges between linear time and cyclical return.

The trains move relentlessly forward, yet consciousness unexpectedly returns to childhood. The poem therefore rejects both purely linear and purely circular conceptions of time, allowing both movements to coexist within the same experiential field.

A third tension develops between certainty and the unknown. Every station suggests a temporary arrival, yet each arrival immediately becomes another departure. Destiny itself remains permanently open.

Structural Openness

The poem intentionally avoids revealing either the beginning or the conclusion of the journey.

Neither the origin nor the destination is fully identified. Instead, the reader enters an already unfolding movement that continues beyond the final image.

The return to childhood does not function as an ending but as another transition within an uninterrupted process of becoming. Consequently, the poem preserves multiple interpretative trajectories without privileging any single explanation.

Its structural completeness therefore coexists with semantic openness, allowing every reading to establish new relationships between memory, identity, and destiny.

Metaharmonic Orientation

The poem ultimately transcends the metaphor of travel.

The railway network becomes an image of a larger order in which individual destinies intersect without ever becoming entirely isolated. Personal experience participates in a broader continuity that extends beyond chronological existence.

The movement toward childhood likewise exceeds nostalgia. It suggests access to a deeper layer of being where memory, imagination, and lived reality converge without losing their individuality.

Within the framework of Dichton, this continuous movement beyond the visible narrative directs the work toward metaharmony, where the apparent fragmentation of life's journeys reveals an underlying coherence that remains greater than any single destination.

Dichton Principle Demonstrated

This poem demonstrates that Dichton may emerge through the continual interaction between physical movement and existential transformation.

Its explicit current depicts an ordinary railway journey, while its implicit current reveals an ongoing passage through successive states of human existence. These two currents remain inseparable without ever collapsing into one another.

Rather than presenting destiny as a fixed path or a completed narrative, the poem portrays human life as an open sequence of transitions whose deeper unity is discovered only through their continuous interaction. In doing so, the work exemplifies one of the essential principles of Dichton: harmony is not located at a final destination but unfolds through the living coherence of perpetual becoming.




General Conclusion

The three examples discussed above demonstrate that Dichton does not arise merely from the coexistence of two semantic currents. Rather, it emerges through the dynamic interaction between two simultaneously unfolding layers of reality.

In each case, the explicit current establishes a coherent and perceptible artistic world, while the implicit current gradually discloses a deeper horizon of meaning that cannot be fully exhausted by a single interpretation. Neither current dominates the other. Their sustained interaction generates a living field of creative tension that remains structurally complete while conceptually open.

Accordingly, Dichton should not be understood simply as a compositional technique or a literary device. It represents a broader principle of artistic organization, in which visible form and invisible coherence continually illuminate one another without collapsing into a final synthesis.

This leads to a more general proposition:

Dichton is the dynamic coherence of simultaneously unfolding realities, sustained through the creative tension between the explicit and the implicit.

Within this perspective, artistic harmony is no longer conceived as a closed state of perfect completion. Instead, it becomes an open process through which every completed work continues to participate in a broader horizon of metaharmony.






Dichton in Music: Dichton Waltz

The Dichton principle may be expressed not only through language but also through purely musical structures. Unlike poetry, where the interaction of explicit and implicit currents unfolds through semantic relationships, music reveals Dichton through the interaction of simultaneously developing sonic processes.

The present composition, Dichton Waltz, should therefore not be understood as conventional polyphony. Rather than presenting two independent melodies, it establishes two distinct organizational logics that coexist without merging into a single musical function. These interacting layers create the impression of two rivers flowing simultaneously through the same musical landscape.

The performance itself is intentionally presented in a modest, almost intimate manner. Its significance lies not in technical virtuosity but in the structural principle embodied by the composition.

Dichton Analysis
Explicit Current


The first musical current is rhythmic and corporeal.

It is established through a recurring waltz-like pulse, regular metric accents, and the continuous sensation of forward motion. This rhythmic foundation provides the listener with orientation and stability throughout the composition.

The pulse functions as the continuum upon which the entire musical structure unfolds.

Implicit Current

The second current develops through harmonic evolution rather than melodic independence.

Its movement is expressed by shifting harmonic centres, unstable sonorities, suspended tonal expectations, and gradual transformations of harmonic equilibrium. Instead of presenting a second melody, the music creates a continuously changing field of harmonic tension.

The listener therefore experiences not merely changing chords but an evolving harmonic landscape whose direction remains intentionally open.

Field of Tension

The principal Dichton tension emerges through the interaction of rhythm and harmony.

The rhythmic current continually affirms stability, continuity, and predictable movement.

The harmonic current simultaneously questions that stability through displacement, tonal ambiguity, and unresolved harmonic relationships.

These two currents do not contradict one another destructively. Instead, they generate what may be described as a coherent contradiction: a dynamic equilibrium sustained through complementary opposition.

A further field of tension arises from their differing temporal behaviour.

The rhythmic layer appears to advance steadily, whereas the harmonic layer seems to drift independently. The listener perceives one current as moving forward while the other appears to float above it, creating the impression of one river flowing above another.

Structural Openness

The composition deliberately avoids complete harmonic closure.

Rather than progressing toward a conventional cadence or an unequivocal final resolution, it sustains a prolonged state of approaching resolution without fully attaining it.

This openness is fundamental rather than incidental. The work remains structurally complete while preserving harmonic expectancy beyond its final sounds.

Consequently, the listener leaves the composition not with the impression of conclusion but with the sensation that its internal movement continues beyond audible silence.

Metaharmonic Orientation

Within the framework of Dichton, harmony is understood not as the elimination of tension but as its coherent organization.

The rhythmic continuum and the harmonic transformations participate in a broader musical order that exceeds both individual themes and conventional tonal architecture.

The composition therefore directs perception beyond the immediate musical material toward an experience of coherence emerging from sustained interaction rather than final resolution.

Its movement toward metaharmony lies precisely in this capacity to preserve unity without suppressing internal diversity.

Dichton Principle Demonstrated

Dichton Waltz demonstrates that Dichton in music is not created through the coexistence of multiple melodies alone. Instead, it arises through the interaction of independent organizational principles operating simultaneously within the same musical continuum.

The rhythmic current functions as a stabilizing force, while the harmonic current continually transforms and destabilizes the listener's tonal expectations. Neither current dominates the other completely. Their sustained interaction generates a living field of musical tension that remains coherent without becoming static.

In this way, the composition illustrates one of the central principles of Dichton: artistic unity may emerge not from the elimination of contradiction but from the harmonious coexistence of complementary dynamics whose interaction continually points beyond the work itself toward metaharmony.

Structural Summary

Dichton Element Musical Realization
Explicit Current Waltz pulse, regular rhythm, metric continuity
Implicit Current Harmonic displacement, unstable tonal centre, evolving harmonic field
Field of Tension Rhythmic stability versus harmonic mobility
Structural Openness Absence of definitive cadence and final harmonic resolution
Metaharmonic Orientation Coherence emerging through sustained interaction
rather than closure
Dichton Principle Musical unity arises through complementary Demonstrated organizational dynamics rather than through melodic
polyphony alone

In music, Dichton is expressed not through parallel melodies but through the simultaneous interaction of independent organizational currents.

Concluding Analytical Synthesis

The examples presented in this study demonstrate that Dichton is not confined to a particular artistic medium. Whether expressed through poetry or music, its fundamental principle remains unchanged.

In every case, the work is organized through the interaction of two simultaneously unfolding currents. One establishes a coherent perceptible structure, while the other introduces a deeper level of movement that continually transforms the meaning, direction, or internal equilibrium of the artistic whole.

These currents do not negate one another. Nor do they merge into a single homogeneous form. Their sustained interaction generates a coherent field of creative tension through which the work remains both structurally complete and semantically open.

The analyses presented above further suggest that Dichton should be understood not simply as a literary or musical technique, but as a universal principle of artistic organization. Its essential characteristic lies in preserving complementary dynamics within a unified artistic structure, allowing harmony to emerge through interaction rather than through the elimination of difference.

Accordingly, the concept of Dichton may be applied beyond poetry and music to other artistic disciplines, including prose, painting, architecture, theatre, cinema, and potentially any creative system in which multiple organizational currents coexist without losing their individual identities.

From this perspective, Dichton represents more than an aesthetic category. It offers a methodological framework for analysing complex artistic structures whose coherence arises from the continuous interaction of explicit and implicit, stable and dynamic, visible and invisible dimensions.

The examples examined in this article therefore should not be regarded as isolated demonstrations, but as initial evidence supporting a broader theoretical proposition.

Dichton may be understood as a universal principle of artistic organization based on the dynamic coherence of simultaneously unfolding realities.

Within this framework, harmony is no longer conceived as static equilibrium or perfect resolution. Instead, it becomes an open, self-developing process in which creative tension remains an indispensable source of artistic integrity.

Thus, Dichton extends the traditional understanding of harmony by introducing the concept of metaharmony—a higher order of coherence in which multiple realities, meanings, and organizational currents continue to evolve without surrendering their individuality.