The Architecture of Limitation (AoL) is often misinterpreted as a philosophical position, ethical framework, or theory of intelligence. This paper clarifies its actual role: AoL functions as a constraint-based validation architecture applied after cognitive compression has already occurred. Rather than generating meaning, insight, or normative guidance, AoL evaluates whether compressed cognitive models remain structurally admissible under conditions of boundary, proportion, and motion. The paper situates AoL within a general cognitive pipeline, showing how meaning necessarily arises through compression in response to combinatory explosion, and how ungoverned compression leads to drift, totalization, and collapse. AoL is presented as a post-compression governance layer that detects structural failure modes without intervening in meaning formation itself. Collapse, within this framework, is treated as diagnostic rather than pathological. A pseudo-formal representation is provided to clarify AoL’s non-generative, non-teleological function and to distinguish admissibility from truth or correctness. The aim of this paper is not to propose a new metaphysical or ethical system, but to articulate a minimal, scalable architecture for governance across human cognition, artificial systems, and institutional reasoning. The revised edition further clarifies the problem context within which AoL operates, situating admissibility as a response to the constraints faced by finite observers acting under conditions of incomplete evaluation. Additional discussion distinguishes the Admissible Cognitive Field (ACF) from broader Cognitive Field traditions, clarifies AoL's relationship to existing theories of cognition, and refines the role of motion by distinguishing stability from closed corrigibility. These revisions do not alter the core validator architecture but provide clearer domain placement, governance framing, and explanatory scope. This work belongs to the Architecture of Limitation research program.
Franky Schaut (Mon,) studied this question.
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