This working paper presents the Magna Carta Orthocratica, a normative meta-framework of civilizational governance developed by Dan Vintila, Civilizational Influence Analyst. The Charter proposes a voluntary ethical standard through which individuals, institutions, and public authorities may examine whether their conduct remains consistent with human dignity, truth, accountability, and the responsible exercise of power. The framework introduces Orthocracy — derived from the Greek orthos (correct) and kratos (governance) — as a civilizational governance protective framework designed to act as an ethical immune system for democratic life, institutions, and public order, see details at Orthocracy . The Charter establishes seventeen Articles covering: the legal status and interpretive principles of the framework; a Core Principle with a formal five-element proportionality test; definitions of thirteen foundational concepts; rights and obligations of persons, society, and institutions; environmental stewardship; limits on power; enforcement architecture including standing, jurisdiction, and a nine-item remedies menu; safeguards; truth and information standards; foreign influence and covert subversion; education and research standards; and implementation mechanisms including an anti-abuse clause. The Charter is designed for voluntary adoption by any institution, community, or authority seeking to align its conduct with civilizational integrity. It is compatible with all legal traditions — civil law, common law, religious law, customary law, and mixed systems — and claims no jurisdiction, enforcement authority, or superiority over existing constitutional orders. It is offered as a universal normative reference: not ideology, not policy, but architecture. / Author: danvintila.com / Hosting: vmdinstitute.org / Work in Progress Project: orthocracy.org /
Vintilă et al. (Tue,) studied this question.