The Invisible Roads Between Us
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- $21.99
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- $21.99
Publisher Description
What happens after a name becomes meaningful?
The first volume of Identity Infrastructure examined how a field discovers a name through recognition, resolution, repetition, and expectation. The Invisible Roads Between Us begins at the next threshold: when that name stops being only an identity and starts becoming a road through which the field moves.
Sandeep Chavan develops a structural theory of identity transmission. He shows how recognition becomes socially stored, how trust travels through familiar routes, how loyalty separates into emotional, historical, symbolic, organizational, operative, strategic, and survival-based forms, and how access follows names, titles, affiliations, recommendations, professions, and institutions.
The book also distinguishes authority from legitimacy, visibility from recognition, familiarity from trustworthiness, compliance from acceptance, and symbols from the consequences they carry. These distinctions make it possible to understand why one person enters a room with credibility already attached while another must begin from zero; why an institution may retain authority after trust has weakened; why people may remember through one identity while resolving through another; and why a symbol can continue reorganizing behaviour long after the original event has passed.
Across families, classrooms, professions, organizations, public institutions, communities, technologies, and digital networks, the same pattern appears. Resolution creates recognition. Recognition becomes socially stored. Stored recognition creates familiar routes. Trust enters those routes. Loyalty keeps them open. Access widens them. Legitimacy stabilizes them. Symbols compress them. Memory carries them through time. Eventually, consequence can continue beyond direct presence.
This is power after presence.
A teacher remains active through the questions students have learned to ask. A founder remains active through standards an organization can apply independently. A profession survives through methods, records, training, and accountability. A public institution continues through accepted procedures. A digital identity may shape opportunity, suspicion, or credibility even after the person is absent.
Yet identity infrastructure does not own the power it carries. A name may retain recognition after present resolution has moved elsewhere. A title may preserve authority without legitimacy. A symbol may remain emotionally powerful while becoming operationally hollow. Chavan therefore distinguishes living transmission from borrowed, residual, distorted, transitional, and hollow forms.
Why do some names open doors before their carriers arrive? Why does loyalty remain after practical alignment has shifted? Why do institutions survive through memory and procedure, and why do familiar routes sometimes exclude unfamiliar capacity? The framework answers these questions without reducing identity to personality, branding, ideology, or self-description. It treats identity as a time-dependent field relation: formed through consequence, transmitted through carriers, and tested by present resolution.
The Invisible Roads Between Us offers more than interpretation. It provides a complete analytical framework through key propositions, the Chavanian Transmission Principles, core terms, a practical diagnostic, a classification of identity carriers, and cross-domain pattern flashes.
For readers interested in identity, social psychology, sociology, organizations, institutions, leadership, power, legitimacy, trust, cultural memory, digital networks, and the hidden architecture of social life, this volume presents a unified way to see how identities become roads—and how those roads begin carrying people, expectations, and consequence far beyond their origins.
The field first finds a name.
Then the name begins carrying the field.