Responsibility Before Permission: Why the Old Free-Market Formula Breaks in the AI AgeCivilization Physics — AI Governance, Responsibility Architecture it merely postpones them. The implications extend beyond autonomous vehicles. The paper argues that AI agents, robotics, and future autonomous systems face the same structural challenge. End users cannot reasonably assume primary responsibility for actions performed by continuously updated, enterprise-controlled systems. As a result, the central governance question becomes: Who is answerable when the system acts? The paper proposes that sustainable AI-native commercialization requires several core responsibility components: Clearly identified enterprise respondents. Emergency escalation and response procedures. Evidence preservation and auditability. Software-remedy obligations. Jurisdictional coordination mechanisms. Operational transparency. Insurance and indemnity structures aligned with upstream accountability. The paper concludes that AI changes the order of regulation. In earlier markets, permission could precede responsibility because responsibility remained visible. In AI-native systems, permission without responsibility creates deferred disorder. Durable commercialization therefore depends on assigning responsibility before permission rather than reconstructing it after failure. Within the Civilization Physics framework, this work establishes a broader principle: commercial freedom in the AI age emerges not from responsibility avoidance, but from responsibility clarity. Keywords: Responsibility Architecture · Autonomous Vehicles · AI Governance · Commercialization · Liability · Insurance Systems · California AV Regulation · Texas SB 2807 · Accountability · Civilization Physics
Xiangyu Guo (Wed,) studied this question.