Modern civilization depends on a vast network of physical, biological, digital, financial, and institutional systems whose interactions are increasingly complex, interdependent, and safety-critical. These systems — ranging from hydrology, energy, transportation, and aerospace to medicine, finance, education, and commerce — operate under conditions of uncertainty, drift, and nondeterminism. Traditional AI systems amplify this instability: they are probabilistic, opaque, non-replayable, and fundamentally unsuitable for governing real-world infrastructure where safety, auditability, and cross-domain coordination are essential. In this paper, I present the **DAIGS Master Taxonomy v1.0** — the first complete, hierarchical, formally grounded classification of deterministic infrastructure governance spanning all critical domains of human and planetary systems. The Deterministic Autonomous Infrastructure Governance System (DAIGS) introduces a universal, deterministic substrate for governing planetary-scale systems by transforming natural-language intent into deterministic, invariant-preserving actions through a layered architecture consisting of Lume (intent substrate), Lume-V (deterministic cognition and identity), Lume-X (canonicalization and compilation), Lume-OS (deterministic runtime), and Lume-Ops (universal operational substrate). **Key Contributions:*** **Ontological Taxonomy:** Complete hierarchical classification of 23 vertical governance substrates across 8 domain categories — Earth systems, industrial systems, maritime, biological and health, food and commerce, institutional, cyber and digital, and defense.* **Cross-Vertical Engine Taxonomy:** Formal classification of 7 invariant classes, 5 envelope classes, 5 arbitration levels, 6 override classes, and 10 drift types into unified, cross-referenced ontological axes.* **Certificate Fabric Taxonomy:** Classification of 11 certificate categories and 9 agent classes that together enable cross-vertical provenance, regulatory audit, and replay-identical reconstruction.* **Formal Properties:** Definitions and proofs of four fundamental taxonomy properties — Completeness (every critical infrastructure sector maps to at least one vertical), Consistency (no conflicting governance decisions without deterministic resolution), Composability (verticals compose without introducing nondeterminism), and Replayability (every governance decision is reconstructable from the certificate chain).* **Cross-Vertical Dependency Analysis:** Canonical dependency chains (Earth Chain, Industrial Chain, Universal, Foundation) and a full 21×21 cross-vertical dependency matrix revealing the structural topology of planetary-scale governance.* **Completeness Validation:** 100% mapping coverage of all 16 DHS National Infrastructure Protection Plan sectors and all 11 EU Critical Entities Resilience Directive sectors to DAIGS verticals.* **Architectural Reference:** Eight master diagrams visualizing the global DAIGS architecture, deterministic substrate stack, dependency graph, arbitration topology, envelope topology, drift correction pipeline, certificate fabric hierarchy, and multi-agent runtime.* **Historical Scenario Analysis:** Demonstration of DAIGS cross-vertical coordination through analysis of the 2021 Texas Grid Failure, the 2008 Financial Crisis, and COVID-19 pandemic response. DAIGS is not an application. It is not a model. It is not a framework. It is the substrate upon which safe civilization-scale autonomy is built. This taxonomy provides the complete scientific, architectural, and operational foundation for the entire deterministic governance ecosystem.
Ronald Jason Andrews (Fri,) studied this question.