This record presents the governing spine of the Conditional Unlocking Framework (CUF), a constraint persistence framework developed to analyze how identity is maintained or lost under iterative updates. The upload contains three tightly coupled documents, released together to establish clear definitions, falsifiability conditions, and jurisdictional limits for all CUF based work: Operational Terms for Constraint-Persistence FrameworksA pre-canonical glossary that fixes the operational meaning of core concepts such as identity predicates, admissibility, constitutive constraints, update operators, admissible corridors, and regime exit. This document exists to prevent semantic drift and post-hoc reinterpretation. Adversarial Falsification Audit of the Conditional Unlocking FrameworkA structured audit tracing a sequence of increasingly rigorous adversarial attempts to falsify CUF. The audit records which critiques fail by category error, which reveal genuine risk, and which conditions CUF explicitly accepts as fatal. This document is methodological and remains valid regardless of CUF’s ultimate correctness. Conditional Unlocking Framework (CUF) v2 Addendum: Falsifiability, Jurisdiction, and Applicability ConstraintsA binding framework-level addendum that retroactively applies to all prior CUF papers. It formally states CUF’s falsifiability conditions, prohibits post-hoc rescue moves, defines jurisdiction limits, and clarifies regime exit and breakdown cases. Together, these documents define how CUF is to be interpreted, tested, and potentially falsified, without asserting empirical validity or making claims beyond declared scope. The bundle is intended to function as a stable reference point for readers, reviewers, and future work engaging with CUF or related constraint based frameworks.
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Kearon Allen (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6975b32bfeba4585c2d6ea2c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18344311
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context:
Kearon Allen
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