This Commentary provides the doctrinal, historical, and conceptual foundations for the four-layeridentity decomposition (s, e, b, a), the first ontology capable of expressing identity as executionrather than configuration. Whereas the ontology paper formalizes the construct, this Commentaryexplains why identity required a decomposition, why four layers are both necessary and sufficient,and how the decomposition resolves long-standing failures in identity continuity, drift detection,attestation, provenance, and governance. The text situates the decomposition within the lineage of substrate-rooted identity research anddemonstrates the structural insufficiency of descriptive models such as (H, E, M). It clarifies theminimality and irreducibility of the four layers, articulates identity as a layered and drift-boundedconstruct, and shows how attestation, temporal projection, and governance become coherent onlywithin this ontology. The Commentary serves as a doctrinal exegesis: a conceptual map that reorganizes prior formalobjects into a unified field of execution-realized identity. It establishes the decomposition as thecanonical primitive for systems in which behavior emerges from execution, not configuration, andlays the groundwork for a new discipline centered on substrate-rooted identity.
Aure Ecker-Fils (Mon,) studied this question.
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