This paper fixes askability within the post-II threshold of Kasei-Theory. Askability is not introduced as inquiry, question, problem, search, curiosity, intention, subject, cognitive act, linguistic act, demand for answer, possibility, modal availability, epistemic lack, or ontology. Reading does not establish askability. Time does not establish askability. Observation does not establish askability. State does not establish askability. Field does not establish askability. Interaction does not establish askability. Information does not establish askability. Phase does not establish askability. Life does not establish askability. Consciousness does not establish askability. Qualia do not establish askability. Configuration does not establish askability. Askability is fixed only as the threshold readability condition under which readable configuration is readable as askable without inquiry. This threshold readability does not establish inquiry, question, problem, search, curiosity, intention, subject, cognitive act, linguistic act, answerability, possibility, modal availability, access, or ontology. The paper prevents askability from being reduced to inquiry, question-form, problem-setting, epistemic search, curiosity, subjective intention, linguistic act, answer-directed structure, modal possibility, or ontological openness. Askability does not inquire, does not become a question, does not belong to a subject, does not seek an answer, does not open a modal domain, and does not reopen the second system. Kasei-Theory does not establish determinism. Fixation is not determination. Constraint is not necessity. Maintainability is not predestination. Non-transition is not modal exclusion. No inquiry is presupposed. No question is introduced. No subject is established. No intention is restored. No search is introduced. No answer is secured.
Juza Minamikata (Sat,) studied this question.