1.9 KiB
1.9 KiB
Three-Pronged Architecture
The three-pronged model describes Passepartout's approach to knowledge and verification: deductive proofs (mathematical certainty), provenance-tracked empirical models (statistical validity), and probabilistic oracle (LLM-aided guidance), all governed by the gate. These notes trace the architectural implications across the system's subsystems and stages.
- Schafmeister and Clasp — Lisp in computational nanotechnology, existence proof for the architecture
- Open-source Wolfram Language in Lisp — viability of bootstrapping a Mathematica equivalent
- Passepartout bootstrapping Mathematica — what the neurosymbolic engine could generate autonomously
- Middle of the Knowledge Tree — the gap between logic and nanotechnology
- The Middle Domain as World Models — mapping empirical science onto world model architecture
- World Models — Plain Language — explanation without jargon
- Practical Powers of the Three-Pronged System — 10 concrete capabilities
- Architectural Integration — how the three prongs fit into Passepartout's subsystems and stages
- Neurological Software in the Empirical Middle — neural networks in the provenance framework
- Wider Implications — what the three-pronged system means for science, safety, regulation, and trust