minimality-is-the-universal-generative-principle
OUT derived (depth 7)
Minimality is the single generative architectural principle underlying all emergent system properties — extensibility and robustness arise from transparent extension composition on the minimal core, while revision completeness arises from uniform edge-case handling within the same core — revealing that these typically independent qualities share a common origin rather than requiring separate design effort.
Summary
All the system's desirable qualities — being easy to extend, handling edge cases correctly, and supporting complete belief revision — trace back to a single design choice: keeping the core minimal. Rather than engineering each quality separately, they all emerge from the same small set of primitives, suggesting minimality is not just an aesthetic preference but the shared root cause of the system's architectural strengths. This claim is currently unsupported because at least one of its foundations has been retracted.
Justifications
SL — Both depth-6 conclusions independently derive different system properties from the same minimal core; combining them reveals minimality as a universal generative principle rather than multiple independent design decisions
Antecedents (all must be IN):
- minimality-yields-extensibility-and-robustness — The minimal core simultaneously enables two independent emergent properties — transparent extension composition (dialectics, multi-agent federation) and uniform edge-case handling (vacuous premises, asymmetric absence) — demonstrating that minimality is operationally productive, not merely aesthetically elegant.
- revision-completeness-follows-from-minimality — The complete revision system — covering both proactive dialectical defeat and reactive contradiction resolution — handles all semantic edge cases uniformly because both revision mechanisms and edge-case handling derive from the same minimal outlist primitive, making completeness an emergent consequence of minimality rather than an engineering feat.
Dependents
These beliefs depend on this one:
- integrity-is-an-emergent-consequence-of-minimality — End-to-end integrity across all mutation paths and architectural boundaries is not an independently-achieved property requiring separate enforcement — it falls out of minimality as another emergent consequence, because uniform primitive evaluation leaves no gaps for inconsistency to enter.
- minimality-is-both-generative-and-unifying — Minimality is simultaneously the generative source of each individual system property (extensibility, robustness, revision completeness) and the unifying principle that makes them cohere — the system achieves unity not by coordinating independently-designed features but because every feature is a different manifestation of the same minimal primitive set.