This Supplement positions the Wittenberg Framework within the contemporary scholarly landscape of AI governance, cross-cultural ethics, normative theory, and geometric modelling. Rather than providing a conventional literature review, it maps the intellectual lineage, parallel research streams, and conceptual neighbourhoods relevant to the Framework. The analysis clarifies how the Framework relates to established traditions—such as Augustinian moral orientation, Confucian role ethics, and European procedural–legal rationality—while remaining distinct from them. It demonstrates that these traditions function as interpretive anchors, not as defining sources of the analytical axes. A central contribution of the Supplement is the explicit clarification that the Framework’s axial architecture is non-exhaustive, non-essentialist, and configurable. The four axes employed represent an analytically sufficient instantiation for comparative purposes, but they are neither numerically fixed nor ontologically closed. Depending on the research context, fewer, additional, or differently specified axes may be employed without altering the core methodology. The Supplement further situates the Framework in relation to contemporary philosophical debates (e.g., value pluralism, incomparability, and normative plurality), adjacent governance and AI ethics research, and existing geometric or axis-based models. It identifies points of proximity without claiming precedence and articulates where the Framework introduces genuine methodological novelty. Overall, this document supports advanced academic use of the Wittenberg Framework by providing conceptual orientation, discursive positioning, and methodological clarification. It is intended as an interpretive and navigational resource for researchers across philosophy, governance studies, policy analysis, and interdisciplinary AI research. Version 1 (2026-02-02): Initial Version
Ingo Wittenberg (Mon,) studied this question.