Understanding as Ethical Intervention
The Question of Action, Three Calibration Conditions, and Persistent Non-Resolution
When I intervene with understanding, am I completing a process — or ending it?
When understanding grants the power to intervene, ethical evaluation turns on a single question. Under conditions of asymmetry and irreversibility, explanation can terminate a process rather than complete it — and the agent who “gets it right” may also be the agent who forecloses what cannot be restored.
This project presents a narrowly scoped ethical diagnostic for high-leverage contexts. It offers no moral rules, optimization strategies, or decision procedures. Its claim is structural: in certain contexts, explanation itself becomes an ethically consequential act because it can terminate a process rather than complete it.
The framework relies on three irreducible calibration conditions — standpoint, irreversibility, and persistent non-resolution — and a stopping rule against invention drift. Its center of gravity lies in ordinary human life: parenting, teaching, caregiving, and every context where understanding creates leverage over someone else’s unfolding process.
Existence & Meaning
The foundational stance: meaning as construction by mortal agents, orientation as foreclosure, and responsibility without guarantee. The metaphysical ground from which the framework proceeds.
The Framework
The full argument: the Question of Action as trigger, three standard candles as a closed set, epistemic foreclosure as an independent harm, and the Roman dodecahedron as boundary object.
Mate in Three
A boy who loves puzzles discovers what happens when you give someone an answer they were about to find for themselves.
Reader’s Guide
Scene-by-scene crosswalk between the story and the manuscript. How the two “Oh”s enact the whole theory in miniature.
Non-Candles 300
296 archaeological and historical candidates tested against the Candle Three gate profile. Zero pass. The scarcity claim is supported by discrimination, not intuition.
Test Frame
The maximum-adversarial review prompt: six gate tests, automatic fail conditions, and banned examples. Try to break Candle Three on its own terms.
The framework is falsifiable. It makes strong predictions about when it should and should not apply, and it specifies disconfirming conditions. It should be evaluated on internal coherence, constraint discipline, the clarity of its exclusions, and the repeatability of its negative results.