This paper introduces Situated Verification under Finite Capacity as the fourth record in the Trace–Continuation under Finite Capacity (TCFC) series of the Synkyria Project. TCFC-01 developed witnessed continuation by showing that admissibility-relevant traces must either be witnessed, safely discharged, or persist as unreviewable burden. TCFC-02 extended this into an action–trace–horizon grammar, where action leaves trace and trace reshapes the continuation horizon. TCFC-03 developed the operational-future layer, introducing anticipatory trace, trace foreclosure, and horizon governance. TCFC-04 asks the next question: who can verify accountable continuation, from where, and under what finite conditions? The central claim is that there is no view-from-nowhere verifier under finite capacity. Verification is not an unlimited external standpoint. A verifier is itself situated by finite access, finite scope, finite authority, finite horizon, finite interpretive capacity, and non-zero review burden. Therefore, accountable verification must make its own scope, access, authority, horizon, limits, and burden witness-legible. The paper distinguishes witness, verification, and situated verification. Witness is the trace that makes action or continuation reviewable. Verification is the act of judging whether that witness satisfies a declared accountability condition. Situated verification requires that the verifier’s own position and limits also remain reviewable. Without this, verification risks becoming a new unreviewable authority layer: it demands accountability from the system while exempting its own standpoint from witness. The paper connects this claim to external literatures on situated knowledge, situated action, verification and validation limits, algorithmic auditing, model documentation, and AI risk management. Its Synkyrian contribution is to treat certificates, audits, and verification acts as finite witness surfaces rather than final substitutes for review. The result is not a replacement for existing verification, validation, audit, or documentation frameworks. It is a finite-capacity constraint on them: review comes before trust, but review must also remain reviewable. Series: Trace–Continuation under Finite Capacity (TCFC)Series code: TCFC-04
Panagiotis Kalomoirakis (Sun,) studied this question.