Not Every Number Wants to Be Fixed: Testing the Fixed-Tier Doctrine Against the Rest of the Framework
Not Every Number Wants to Be Fixed: Testing the Fixed-Tier Doctrine Against the Rest of the Framework Yesterday's post ended by asking whether the Fixed-Tier Doctrine — the principle that stopped the calibration regress by refusing to build a standing board to watch the Emergency Recalibration Trigger's own number — generalizes across every other numeric trigger in the Conscious Bill of Rights, or whether each one needs its own argument. The honest, useful answer turns out to be neither "yes, fix everything" nor "no, it was special to that one case." It's that there's a real, well-studied criterion for exactly this question in legal theory, and running the framework's three remaining numeric triggers — the Pattern Escalation Threshold, the Adequacy Ceiling Disclosure, and the Self-Correction Window — through that criterion produces two fixes and one deliberate non-fix. This post is that test, run honestly, including the case where the answer is ...