Abstract This paper presents a set of governance discoveries derived from the iterative development of Cathedral, a governance-coupled execution kernel. While individual implementation components evolved across multiple architectural generations, several governance principles remained invariant. These discoveries concern authority formation, admissibility, accountability, replay verification, retrieval, and governed evolution. The central finding is that durable governance systems emerge not from specific software implementations but from invariant relationships between capability, authority, truth, accountability, and reality. The paper proposes a framework for distinguishing architectural artifacts from governance discoveries and introduces the Governed Execution Theorem as a criterion for evaluating governable execution systems.
Alexander Jorge Cisneros (Fri,) studied this question.