STREETOCRATIC LAWS OF CAUSE & EFFECT
(Legal-Style Codex of Dominion Causality)
PREAMBLE
This Codex establishes the governing laws of causation within all dominion systems. It defines the structural relationship between reasons, causes, results, and consequences, and provides the framework for control, prediction, and sustained system dominance.
All dominion systems, whether conceptual, operational, or structural, shall be subject to these laws.
ARTICLE I — LAW OF UNIVERSAL CAUSATION
Section 1.1 — Principle of Origin
No result shall exist without a preceding cause. All observable outcomes must be traceable to identifiable initiating conditions.
Section 1.2 — Principle of Continuity
Every cause shall generate an effect, whether immediate or delayed, visible or concealed.
Section 1.3 — Principle of Non-Randomness
Events appearing random shall be classified as unobserved or misunderstood causation, not absence of cause.
ARTICLE II — LAW OF CAUSAL STRUCTURE
Section 2.1 — Necessary Causes
A necessary cause shall be defined as a required condition without which a result cannot occur.
Section 2.2 — Sufficient Causes
A sufficient cause shall be defined as a complete set of conditions that guarantees a result.
Section 2.3 — Composite Causation
Multiple necessary causes may combine to form a sufficient cause, thereby producing a result.
Section 2.4 — Structural Integrity Requirement
All causes must be evaluated within the system in which they operate. Misplaced causes produce invalid or distorted results.
ARTICLE III — LAW OF CAUSAL ALIGNMENT
Section 3.1 — Alignment Requirement
Causes must align with system structure, timing, and environmental conditions to produce intended results.
Section 3.2 — Misalignment Consequence
Misaligned causes shall result in:
Incomplete outcomes
Distorted outputs
System instability
Section 3.3 — Precision Mandate
The strength of a result shall be proportional to the precision of its cause.
ARTICLE IV — LAW OF RESULT CONSISTENCY
Section 4.1 — Reproducibility Principle
Identical causes applied under identical conditions shall produce identical results.
Section 4.2 — Variability Clause
Variations in results indicate variation in causes, conditions, or system integrity.
Section 4.3 — Stability Standard
Results shall be classified as valid only if they demonstrate consistency over time and across conditions.
ARTICLE V — LAW OF CONSEQUENCE EXTENSION
Section 5.1 — Direct Consequences
Every result shall generate immediate extensions within its originating system.
Section 5.2 — Indirect Consequences
Results shall produce secondary effects across connected systems.
Section 5.3 — Compounding Effects
Repeated causes shall generate compounded consequences, increasing in magnitude over time.
ARTICLE VI — LAW OF TEMPORAL SEQUENCE
Section 6.1 — Priority of Cause
Causes must precede or coincide with their effects.
Section 6.2 — Delayed Effects Clause
Effects may occur after extended intervals, but remain bound to their originating causes.
Section 6.3 — Sequence Integrity
Disruption of causal sequence results in system unpredictability and instability.
ARTICLE VII — LAW OF CAUSAL ACCOUNTABILITY
Section 7.1 — Responsibility Attribution
All results shall be attributed to their originating causes, whether direct or indirect.
Section 7.2 — System Accountability
Systems shall be evaluated based on the causes they generate and sustain.
Section 7.3 — Denial Clause
Failure to acknowledge causation shall not eliminate responsibility for resulting consequences.
ARTICLE VIII — LAW OF CAUSAL CONTROL
Section 8.1 — Control Principle
Control over causes equates to control over results.
Section 8.2 — Predictive Authority
Understanding causal structures enables prediction of future outcomes.
Section 8.3 — Intervention Clause
Modification of causes shall alter results and redirect system trajectories.
ARTICLE IX — LAW OF CAUSAL FAILURE
Section 9.1 — Weak Cause Condition
Insufficient or incomplete causes shall produce weak or unstable results.
Section 9.2 — Misidentified Cause Error
Incorrect identification of causes shall result in ineffective interventions.
Section 9.3 — System Collapse Clause
Persistent causal failure shall lead to structural breakdown and system collapse.
ARTICLE X — LAW OF DOMINION CAUSAL SUPREMACY
Section 10.1 — Dominion Requirement
A dominion system shall achieve supremacy when it consistently:
Defines accurate reasons
Activates precise causes
Produces stable results
Controls resulting consequences
Section 10.2 — Strategic Superiority
The system that best understands and controls causation shall dominate systems that do not.
Section 10.3 — Continuity Clause
Sustained dominion requires continuous monitoring, adjustment, and refinement of causal structures.
FINAL LEGAL DECLARATION
All systems operate within causation.
All outcomes arise from structure.
All dominance is achieved through control of causes.
A system that governs causes governs results.
A system that governs results governs consequences.
A system that governs consequences governs the future.
ORDER