Canon² — Trust Layer Research Archive. Synthetic organisms operating within deterministic ecosystems require communication channels whose behavior is as predictable, auditable, and reproducible as the organisms themselves. Classical messaging systems—whether remote procedure calls, publish-subscribe buses, or actor-model mailboxes—operate under assumptions that are incompatible with the deterministic guarantees required by the Lume runtime and the Trust Layer Certificate Fabric. These systems tolerate message reordering, permit unbounded delivery latency, and provide no cryptographic linkage between message content and the computational context in which the message was produced. In ecosystems where every state transition must be certificate-bound and every computational path must be reproducible across distributed nodes, such tolerance is unacceptable. I formalize Deterministic Cross-Organism Communication Protocols (D-COCP) as the architectural framework that governs all inter-organism signaling within distributed deterministic ecosystems. D-COCP ensures that every message exchanged between synthetic organisms is deterministically ordered, semantically normalized, cryptographically anchored to the sender's and receiver's certificate chains, and processed identically across all nodes in the ecosystem. Cross-organism communication, as I define it, differs fundamentally from agent messaging and distributed systems RPC: organisms are not stateless services but stateful, self-maintaining, homeostatic entities whose communication patterns are governed by biological analogues including chemotaxis, quorum sensing, and synaptic signaling. D-COCP formalizes these biological communication patterns into deterministic computational primitives that preserve the organisms' behavioral properties while ensuring ecosystem-wide consistency. I integrate D-COCP with the Lume compiler's deterministic AST pipeline, Lume-V execution envelopes, Trust Layer certificate hierarchies, DAIGS cognitive substrates, LDIR multilingual inference semantics, SOR biological hierarchy, ZK-SRP state reversal protocols, G-DRSP global synchronization protocols, and GUPAS governance pipelines. Communication envelopes bound every signaling operation. Identity anchoring binds every message to verified organism certificates. Signal normalization ensures semantic equivalence across heterogeneous organism populations. This work establishes what is, to my knowledge, the first complete cross-organism communication architecture for distributed deterministic ecosystems.
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Ronald Jason Andrews
Research Studios Austria
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Ronald Jason Andrews (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a001ff2c8f74e3340f9b32c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20074798