About
About Love OS
A structural compatibility framework based on the interaction of Attraction × Relational Viability.
Why this framework exists
Relationship discourse often merges fundamentally different relational forces into a single concept called compatibility. Chemistry, durability, emotional intensity, and structural stability are treated as if they were interchangeable.
Love OS separates two interacting systems:
- Attraction — the drivers of desire, polarity, and psychological pull.
- Relational Viability — the structural capacity of a relationship to remain stable under stress and time.
Compatibility is modeled as an interaction effect, not an assumption.
Conceptual foundation
The framework integrates established research traditions in:
- Attachment theory
- Interpersonal regulation and affect dynamics
- Personality and conflict-style research
- Systems thinking and structural modeling
Rather than introducing new constructs, Love OS reorganizes known relational principles into a coherent dimensional model with explicit structural logic.
Core hypothesis: Long-term compatibility emerges from the interaction between attraction drivers and viability structure.
Methodological stance
This is an independent research initiative developed by a founder with doctoral-level academic training and a background in analytical modeling and strategic systems design.
The orientation is structural rather than therapeutic. The emphasis is on:
- Conceptual clarity
- Internal logical consistency
- Explicit dimensional mapping
- Practical interpretability
The model is currently in iterative refinement.
Scope and limitations
Love OS is not clinical guidance and does not replace therapy, counseling, or psychological diagnosis.
It is a structured reflection framework designed to make implicit relational patterns explicit and analyzable.
Contribute to the model
Feedback that improves clarity, resolves inconsistencies, or strengthens empirical grounding is explicitly welcomed.
Research & feedback: feedback@archetypesoflove.com
Love OS — Independent Research Project
© 2026