The Conditions of Architectural Limitation is a companion paper to The Architecture of Limitation: Manuscript I — Metaphysical Expression. It examines how an architecture governed by limitation should relate to observation, critique, stewardship, and revision without becoming either self-sealing or structurally unstable. The paper addresses the risk of architectural immunity: the tendency for explanatory structures to become increasingly capable of protecting themselves from corrective information. Within this context, critique is not treated as authority, violation, or automatic correction, but as potential pressure. Stewardship is presented as the function responsible for assessing whether such pressure warrants revision, retention, or deferral. The paper further identifies conditions under which the Architecture of Limitation may encounter ambiguity, loss of resolution, domain mismatch, observer dependence, stewardship dependence, and non-shared reality conditions. It also outlines revision pressure and potential falsification conditions, including cases where limitation-based assessment, non-mastery, collapse, or architectural diagnostic claims would face substantive challenge. This work does not defend the Architecture of Limitation, establish its correctness, or respond to a specific critic. Its purpose is to clarify how legitimate pressure may reach an architecture, how stewardship evaluates that pressure, and under what conditions revision becomes proportionally justified. The central claim is that no architecture is entitled to immunity from observation. Under limitation, vulnerability to legitimate pressure is not a weakness of the architecture but one expression of limitation itself. This work forms part of the broader Architecture of Limitation / AoLOS research program. The corpus investigates reasoning systems under structural constraint and is maintained as an evolving open research program through the Zenodo archive. Recent publications extend the program beyond architectural and diagnostic investigation toward operational architecture, instrumentation, cognitive compatibility, and open research collaboration under shared constraint conditions.
Franky Schaut (Fri,) studied this question.