Entanglement is a relation that acts, even when it is not visible.
Second-order cybernetics shows that the observer does not stand outside. The relation acts before it is observed.
This is where entanglement begins.
The moment a relation is spoken of, the observer is already part of what is happening.
At the center are the conditions under which description, relation, and responsibility become possible.
The observer does not stand outside. The observer is part of what is changing.
Here, entanglement does not mean knowledge. It names a change in reality that cannot be undone.
Responsibility does not arise from attitude or morality. It arises from the fact that observation intervenes.
These texts are not a method, not a model, and not an offer for application.
They mark an independent position and the consequences that follow from it.