2026-01-03 00:01:49
How are you, hacker?
🪐 What’s happening in tech today, January 2, 2026?
The HackerNoon Newsletter brings the HackerNoon homepage straight to your inbox. On this day, The Palmer Raids began in the US in 1920, NASA launched its farthest exploration in 2019, The Federal Rules of Evidence were enacted in the US in 1975, and we present you with these top quality stories. From The Brain at the Edge of Chaos. When Predictive Coding Fails and Randomness Enters to The “Deterministic Black Box” That Keeps Failing Your Etherscan Verifications, let’s dive right in.

By @hackersdckei [ 11 Min read ] Crypto contract verification is the definitive proof of identity in the DeFi ecosystem. However, the process is often misunderstood. Read More.

By @riedriftlens [ 5 Min read ] Why creativity and insight emerge when control loosens. An exploration of predictive coding, randomness, and the brain at the edge of chaos. Read More.

By @hacker39947670 [ 15 Min read ] Bundlers are the bridge between account abstraction and the execution layer. Read More.

By @khamisihamisi [ 4 Min read ] Over 90% of companies are either using or exploring the use of AI. How is your business using AI? Read More.

By @technologynews [ 7 Min read ] The U.S. Virgin Islands is accusing Meta of deliberately profiting from scam advertising. Read More.
🧑💻 What happened in your world this week?
It's been said that writing can help consolidate technical knowledge, establish credibility, and contribute to emerging community standards. Feeling stuck? We got you covered ⬇️⬇️⬇️
ANSWER THESE GREATEST INTERVIEW QUESTIONS OF ALL TIME
We hope you enjoy this worth of free reading material. Feel free to forward this email to a nerdy friend who'll love you for it.See you on Planet Internet! With love, The HackerNoon Team ✌️

2026-01-02 23:30:08
Hey hackers!
If you’ve ever wondered why some of your submissions take a while before they get published, it’s probably because you’re submitting incomplete articles.
While most contributors focus on the content and the headline, we often receive submissions that are missing their meta, TL;dr, and keyword sections. Worse yet, sometimes contributors will add some keywords but not maximize the space for some of that SEO goodness.
As we start the new year, the editorial team thinks it’s a good time to remind all contributors of some of the best practices that can greatly improve the time to publish your stories.
\
HackerNoon offers authors the ability to add eight unique keywords in the “Story Tags” section of your article. You can either choose pre-populated keywords or add some of your own. The word limit per keyword is 30 characters, which means you can experiment with long-tail keywords.
Keywords can also be added right below the Title in the Chowa editor (Just look for the cat emoji).
**
**As we’ve said so previously, crafting innovative keywords can elevate your story from hundreds to thousands of views, and there really is no reason for you to NOT maximize that space.
Better yet, if you submit stories with all relevant keyword tags added, editors are likely to be appreciative of that effort and expedite publishing for you 🙂
\
The meta is a great way to give both readers AND Google’s search algorithm an idea what your article is about. Meta is that long paragraph that appears right under a search URL when you Google something.
HackerNoon’s Meta gives you 160 characters to show the world what your article is about, so try to be creative. Even a short snippet of your article goes a long way.
**
**TL;DR is a unique HackerNoon feature that lets you summarize your article for some of our more *busy* readers.
\
If you have your own featured image, great! If not, HackerNoon offers a range of stock photo providers when you click to upload your image. Choose a keyword that fits the theme of your article and you’re good to go!
**
**Follow these steps, and your article is sure to be published a LOT sooner.
Oh, and btw, if you’re interested in becoming a better writer and really get the editorial team’s attention, HackerNoon is offering the Blogging Course.
The HackerNoon Blogging Course with its self-paced structure, on-demand video lessons, practical tools and templates (yours to keep), exercises, and a community to learn with, allows you to digest all the resources you need to grow your reach and authority as a writer.
==If you want to stand out from the crowd, sign up for the HackerNoon Blogging Course today!==
2026-01-02 19:41:32
In an environment of perpetual digital noise, geopolitical friction, and algorithmic manipulation, many users have lost faith in the integrity of the information they see. The information landscape is saturated, blurring the lines between ordinary discourse and strategic misinformation by companies or states.
If high-stakes decisions (from investment strategies to international security choices) are based on data that can be fabricated or perpetually disputed, the global system will face a crisis of integrity and legitimacy.
One way to address this challenge is to have automated, neutral third-parties provide reliable information. In the world of Blockchains and Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT), this is called an Oracle, and the data it provided by Oracles can be codified in smart contracts. An Oracle’s job is to securely and automatically bridge external data into the immutable ledger. The Oracle acts as the objective, trustless witness: a key element in the trust required to enforce accountability and transparency across commerce, finance, and diplomacy, cutting through the noise, misinformation and disinformation that plagues the information landscape.
An Oracle can help answer questions that are key to trust: where do products come from? Who is trustworthy? And, are agreements - like geopolitical agreements - being upheld?
I. Traceability: Where Do Products Come From?
For consumers, regulators, and investors, proving the verifiable origin and journey of any product has become a strategic necessity.
Whether it is ensuring a luxury watch is not a counterfeit or confirming a shipment of rare earth minerals meets ethical sourcing requirements, the current system relies on paper trails and centralized, easily manipulable databases - not to mention some actors with incentives to cheat.
DLT provides the permanent ledger for these records. The Oracle provides the real-time link. Oracles can integrate sensor data, GPS coordinates, location analytics, and IoT data directly into the blockchain, creating a cryptographically secured timeline for a product’s lifecycle.
For example, when validating a critical component used in a fighter jet or confirming the quality of high-end agricultural exports, the Oracle pulls verified data from the physical world (time-stamped images of manufacturing facilities, atmospheric readings, or legal customs forms) and hashes it onto the DLT. This process ensures that both investors and regulators can confidently rely on the data’s integrity at every step. This application establishes a verifiable, tamper-proof layer of “ground truth”.
II. Who Is Trustworthy?
Investment decisions and lending practices are, essentially, risk assessments based on expected performance. When an enterprise, particularly in an illiquid sector like commercial real estate or specialized manufacturing, claims strong activity, that claim must be verifiable.
This is where the Oracle enables external, objective validation against fraudulent financial reporting. If a business claims massive operational output, an Oracle can be programmed to integrate objective data streams that reflect that activity.
For example, the claims a physical business is making about substantial activity can be supported by satellite or aerial imagery showing traffic density, vehicle types, or parking lot occupancy over time. This data can serve an important purpose in auditing commercial claims. Regulators, shareholders, and potential acquirers can use it to validate financial integrity, providing transparency to a market often obscured by selective reporting.
III. Are Agreements Being Upheld?
The highest stakes for verification lie in geopolitical competition, where strategic rivalry often overrides political consensus. Nations frequently accuse one another of violating sanctions, ceasefires, or non-proliferation agreements, such as allegations regarding illicit oil trade or nuclear enrichment levels. This prolongs conflicts due to conflicting intelligence and propaganda, serving narrow political goals. It also reduces business confidence.
Here, too, automated Oracles offer a mechanism to enforce necessary transparency when political trust is absent. For sensitive geopolitical concerns, automated verification can bring added value by acting as a shared data management system where multiple parties lack a central trusted third party.
For example, When tackling sophisticated evasion techniques, such as the use of “shadow fleets” to conceal illicit maritime trade, an Oracle can integrate vast streams of data, including satellite maritime tracking, vessel registration changes, and known association networks.
Conclusion
Whether securing a supply chain, verifying corporate claims, or stabilizing global security, the combination of DLT's immutable record and the Oracle's automated, neutral testimony is the necessary architecture for restoring a measure of verifiable ground truth in our digital age.
2026-01-02 19:28:19
Data engineering exists because production databases are built for fast transactions (rows), while analytics requires massive scans (columns); trying to do both on one system can crash your business and cost millions.
2026-01-02 17:18:57
Crypto contract verification is the definitive proof of identity in the DeFi ecosystem, transforming opaque bytecode into trusted logic. However, the process is often misunderstood, leading to frustration when the "Deterministic Black Box" of the compiler produces mismatching fingerprints. This article demystifies verification by visualizing it as a "Mirror Mechanism," where local compilation environments must precisely replicate the deployment conditions. We move beyond manual web uploads to establish a robust, automated workflow using CLI tools and the "Standard JSON Input" — the ultimate weapon against obscure verification errors. Finally, we analyze the critical trade-off between aggressive viaIR gas optimizations and verification complexity, equipping you with a strategic framework for engineering resilient, transparent protocols.
Introduction
Crypto contract verification is not just about getting a green checkmark on Etherscan; it is the definitive proof of identity for your code. Once deployed, a contract is reduced to raw bytecode, effectively stripping away its provenance. To prove its source and establish ownership in a trustless environment, verification is mandatory. It is a fundamental requirement for transparency, security, and composability in the DeFi ecosystem. Without it, a contract remains an opaque blob of hexadecimal bytecode—unreadable to users and unusable by other developers.
The Mirror Mechanism
To conquer verification errors, we must first understand what actually happens when we hit "Verify." It is deceptively simple: the block explorer (e.g., Etherscan) must recreate your exact compilation environment to prove that the source code provided produces the exact same bytecode deployed on the chain.
As illustrated in Figure 1, this process acts as a "Mirror Mechanism." The verifier independently compiles your source code and compares the output byte-by-byte with the on-chain data.
If even one byte differs, the verification fails. This leads us to the core struggle of every Solidity developer.
The Deterministic Black Box
In theory, "byte-perfect" matching sounds easy. In practice, it is where the nightmare begins. A developer can have a perfectly functioning dApp, passing 100% of local tests, yet find themselves stuck in verification limbo.
Why? Because the Solidity compiler is a Deterministic Black Box. As shown in Figure 2, the output bytecode is not determined by source code alone. It is the product of dozens of invisible variables: compiler versions, optimization runs, metadata hashes, and even the specific EVM version.
A slight discrepancy in your local hardhat.config.ts versus what Etherscan assumes—such as a different viaIR setting or a missing proxy configuration—will result in a completely different bytecode hash (Bytecode B), causing the dreaded "Bytecode Mismatch" error.
This guide aims to turn you from a developer who "hopes" verification works into a mastermind who controls the black box. We will explore the standard CLI flows, the manual overrides, and finally, present data-driven insights into how advanced optimizations impact this fragile process.
The CLI Approach – Precision & Automation
In the previous section, we visualized the verification process as a "Mirror Mechanism" (Figure 1). The goal is to ensure your local compilation matches the remote environment perfectly. Doing this manually via a web UI is error-prone; a single misclick on the compiler version dropdown can ruin the hash.
This is where Command Line Interface (CLI) tools shine. By using the exact same configuration file (hardhat.config.ts or foundry.toml) for both deployment and verification, CLI tools enforce consistency, effectively shrinking the "Deterministic Black Box" (Figure 2) into a manageable pipeline.
Hardhat Verification
For most developers, the hardhat-verify plugin is the first line of defense. It automates the extraction of build artifacts and communicates directly with the Etherscan API.
To enable it, ensure your hardhat.config.ts includes the etherscan configuration. This is often where the first point of failure occurs: Network Mismatch.
// hardhat.config.ts
import "@nomicfoundation/hardhat-verify";
module.exports = {
solidity: {
version: "0.8.20",
settings: {
optimizer: {
enabled: true, // Critical: Must match deployment!
runs: 200,
},
viaIR: true, // Often overlooked, causes huge bytecode diffs
},
},
etherscan: {
apiKey: {
// Use different keys for different chains to avoid rate limits
mainnet: "YOUR_ETHERSCAN_API_KEY",
sepolia: "YOUR_ETHERSCAN_API_KEY",
},
},
};
The Command: Once configured, the verification command is straightforward. It recompiles the contract locally to generate the artifacts and then submits the source code to Etherscan. Mastermind Tip: Always run npx hardhat clean before verifying. Stale artifacts (cached bytecode from a previous compile with different settings) are a silent killer of verification attempts.
npx hardhat verify --network sepolia <DEPLOYED_CONTRACT_ADDRESS> <CONSTRUCTOR_ARGS>
The Pitfall of Constructor Arguments
If your contract has a constructor, verification becomes significantly harder. The CLI needs to know the exact values you passed during deployment to recreate the creation code signature.
If you deployed using a script, you should create a separate arguments file (e.g., arguments.ts) to maintain a "Single Source of Truth."
// arguments.ts
module.exports = [
"0x123...TokenAddress", // _token
"My DAO Name", // _name
1000000n // _initialSupply (Use BigInt for uint256)
];
Why this matters: A common error is passing 1000000 (number) instead of "1000000" (string) or 1000000n (BigInt). CLI tools encode these differently into ABI Hex. If the ABI encoding differs by even one bit, the resulting bytecode signature changes, and Figure 1's "Comparison" step will result in a Mismatch.
Foundry Verification
For those using the Foundry toolchain, verification is blazing fast and built natively into forge. Unlike Hardhat, which requires a plugin, Foundry handles this out of the box.
forge verify-contract \
--chain-id 11155111 \
--num-of-optimizations 200 \
--watch \
<CONTRACT_ADDRESS> \
src/MyContract.sol:MyContract \
<ETHERSCAN_API_KEY>
The Power of --watch: Foundry's --watch flag acts like a "verbose mode," polling Etherscan for the status. It gives you immediate feedback on whether the submission was accepted or if it failed due to "Bytecode Mismatch," saving you from refreshing the browser window.
Even with perfect config, you might encounter opaque errors like AggregateError or "Fail - Unable to verify." This often happens when:
Chained Imports: Your contract imports 50+ files, and Etherscan's API times out processing the massive JSON payload.
Library Linking: Your contract relies on external libraries that haven't been verified yet.
In these "Code Red" scenarios, the CLI hits its limit. We must abandon the automated scripts and operate manually on the source code itself. This leads us to the ultimate verification technique: Standard JSON Input.
Standard JSON Input
When hardhat-verify throws an opaque AggregateError or times out due to a slow network connection, most developers panic. They resort to "Flattener" plugins, trying to squash 50 files into one giant .sol file.
Stop flattening your contracts. Flattening destroys the project structure, breaks imports, and often messes up license identifiers, leading to more verification errors.
The correct, professional fallback is the Standard JSON Input.
Think of the Solidity Compiler (solc) as a machine. It doesn't care about your VS Code setup, your node_modules folder, or your remappings. It only cares about one thing: a specific JSON object that contains the source code and the configuration.
When you use Standard JSON, you are removing the file system from the equation. You are handing Etherscan the exact raw data payload that the compiler needs.
Extracting the "Golden Ticket" from Hardhat
You don't need to write this JSON manually. Hardhat generates it every time you compile, but it hides it deep in the artifacts folder.
If your CLI verification fails, follow this "Break Glass in Emergency" procedure:
Run npx hardhat compile. Navigate to artifacts/build-info/. You will find a JSON file with a hash name (e.g., a1b2c3…json). Open it. Inside, look for the top-level input object. Copy the entire input object and save it as verify.json.
Mastermind Tip: This verify.json is the "Source of Truth." It contains the literal text of your contracts and the exact settings used to compile them. If this file allows you to reproduce the bytecode locally, it must work on Etherscan.
If you cannot find the build info or are working in a non-standard environment, you don't need to be panic. You can generate the Standard JSON Input yourself using a simple Typescript snippet.
This approach gives you absolute control over what gets sent to Etherscan, allowing you to explicitly handle imports and remappings.
// scripts/generate-verify-json.ts
import * as fs from 'fs';
import * as path from 'path';
// 1. Define the Standard JSON Interface for type safety
interface StandardJsonInput {
language: string;
sources: { [key: string]: { content: string } };
settings: {
optimizer: {
enabled: boolean;
runs: number;
};
evmVersion: string;
viaIR?: boolean; // Optional but crucial if used
outputSelection: {
[file: string]: {
[contract: string]: string[];
};
};
};
}
// 2. Define your strict configuration
const config: StandardJsonInput = {
language: "Solidity",
sources: {},
settings: {
optimizer: {
enabled: true,
runs: 200,
},
evmVersion: "paris", // ⚠️ Critical: Must match deployment!
viaIR: true, // Don't forget this if you used it!
outputSelection: {
"*": {
"*": ["abi", "evm.bytecode", "evm.deployedBytecode", "metadata"],
},
},
},
};
// 3. Load your contract and its dependencies manually
// Note: You must map the import path (key) to the file content (value) exactly.
const files: string[] = [
"contracts/MyToken.sol",
"node_modules/@openzeppelin/contracts/token/ERC20/ERC20.sol",
"node_modules/@openzeppelin/contracts/token/ERC20/IERC20.sol",
// ... list all dependencies here
];
files.forEach((filePath) => {
// Logic to clean up import paths (e.g., removing 'node_modules/')
// Etherscan expects the key to match the 'import' statement in Solidity
const importPath = filePath.includes("node_modules/")
? filePath.replace("node_modules/", "")
: filePath;
if (fs.existsSync(filePath)) {
config.sources[importPath] = {
content: fs.readFileSync(filePath, "utf8"),
};
} else {
console.error(`❌ File not found: ${filePath}`);
process.exit(1);
}
});
// 4. Write the Golden Ticket
const outputPath = path.resolve(__dirname, "../verify.json");
fs.writeFileSync(outputPath, JSON.stringify(config, null, 2));
console.log(`✅ Standard JSON generated at: ${outputPath}`);
Why This Always Works
Using Standard JSON is superior to flattening because it preserves the metadata hash.
When you flatten a file, you are technically changing the source code (removing imports, rearranging lines). This can sometimes alter the resulting bytecode's metadata, leading to a fingerprint mismatch. Standard JSON preserves the multi-file structure exactly as the compiler saw it during deployment.
If Standard JSON verification fails, the issue is 100% in your settings (Figure 2), not in your source code.
The viaIR Trade-off
Before wrapping up, we must address the elephant in the room: viaIR. In modern Solidity development (especially v0.8.20+), enabling viaIR has become the standard for achieving minimal gas costs, but it comes with a high price for verification complexity.
The Pipeline Shift
Why does a simple true/false flag cause such chaos? Because it fundamentally changes the compilation path.
Legacy Pipeline: Translates Solidity directly to Opcode. The structure largely mirrors your code.
IR Pipeline: Translates Solidity to Yul (Intermediate Representation) first. The optimizer then aggressively rewrites this Yul code—inlining functions and reordering stack operations—before generating bytecode
As shown in Figure 3, Bytecode B is structurally distinct from Bytecode A. You cannot verify a contract deployed with the IR pipeline using a legacy configuration. It is a binary commitment.
Gas Efficiency vs. Verifiability
The decision to enable viaIR represents a fundamental shift in the cost structure of Ethereum development. It is not merely a compiler flag; it is a trade-off between execution efficiency and compilation stability.
In the legacy pipeline, the compiler acted largely as a translator, converting Solidity statements into opcodes with local, peephole optimizations. The resulting bytecode was predictable and closely mirrored the syntactic structure of the source code. However, this approach hit a ceiling. Complex DeFi protocols frequently encountered "Stack Too Deep" errors, and the inability to perform cross-function optimizations meant users were paying for inefficient stack management.
The IR pipeline solves this by treating the entire contract as a holistic mathematical object in Yul. It can aggressively inline functions, rearrange memory slots, and eliminate redundant stack operations across the entire codebase. This results in significantly cheaper transactions for the end-user.
However, this optimization comes at a steep price for the developer. The "distance" between the source code and the machine code widens drastically. This introduces two major challenges for verification:
Therefore, enabling viaIR is a transfer of burden. We are voluntarily increasing the burden on the developer (longer compilation times, fragile verification, strict config management) to decrease the burden on the user (lower gas fees). As a Mastermind engineer, you accept this trade-off, but you must respect the fragility it introduces to the verification process.
Conclusion
In the Dark Forest of DeFi, code is law, but verified code is identity.
We started by visualizing the verification process not as a magic button, but as a "Mirror Mechanism" (Figure 1). We dissected the "Deterministic Black Box" (Figure 2) and confronted the Optimization Paradox. As we push for maximum gas efficiency using viaIR and aggressive optimizer runs, we widen the gap between source code and bytecode. We accept the burden of higher verification complexity to deliver a cheaper, better experience for our users.
While web UIs are convenient, relying on them introduces human error. As a professional crypto contract engineer, your verification strategy should be built on three pillars:
Verification is not an afterthought to be handled five minutes after deployment. It is the final seal of quality engineering, proving that the code running on the blockchain is exactly the code you wrote.
\
2026-01-02 17:16:32
The pursuit of ethical Artificial Intelligence (AI) has been defined by a single, implicit ambition: the creation of a "complete" ethical machine. This is the dream of building an autonomous system whose internal logic, training data, and reward functions are comprehensive enough to resolve any moral dilemma it encounters without human intervention. From the rigid rule-sets of symbolic AI to the "aligned" reinforcement learning models of today, the governing philosophy remains the same: if we can just encode the right rules, the system will be ethically self-sufficient.
However, as discussed in our analysis of the Positive-Sum Operating System [[https://hackernoon.com/an-architects-view-why-ai-needs-an-ethical-os-not-more-rules]()], current ethical frameworks fail because they lack a coherent loss function. But the problem runs deeper than bad code; it is a problem of incomplete logic.
The ambition of a self-sufficient ethical system rests on a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of formal systems. By definition, any AI operating on a set of algorithmic axioms is a "Formal System"—a closed loop of logic that attempts to derive all truths from within itself.
This categorization is not merely descriptive; it is a diagnosis of limitation. As a formal system, an ethical AI is subject to the hard constraints of logic itself, most notably Gödel's Incompleteness Theorems.
In 1931, Kurt Gödel proved that in any consistent formal system capable of basic arithmetic, there are true statements that cannot be proven within the system itself. Later work by logicians Stephen Kleene and Torkel Franzén expanded this, demonstrating that this incompleteness applies to any computable system of sufficient complexity—including modern neural networks.
This leads to a startling conclusion: An AI cannot be both Consistent and Complete.
Therefore, the failures we see in AI today—ethical hallucinations, algorithmic bias, reward hacking—are not "bugs" to be fixed. They are structural evidence of incompleteness. We are trying to build a tower that reaches the sky using bricks that cannot support infinite weight.

To find the solution to this mathematical incompleteness, we must widen our scope. We must look beyond the code of the machine to the structure of reality itself. The structural flaw we see in AI logic—the inability of a system to define its own truth—mirrors the fundamental debate in cosmology regarding the origin of the system.
Classical Big Bang cosmology describes the universe's origin as a Singularity (often visualized as a "Cone"). In this view, if you trace the history of the system backward, you eventually hit a sharp point of infinite density where the laws of physics break down.
If we apply this model to an AI system, the origin is viewed as a mathematical singularity—a broken, undefinable point where the code crashes. This implies that the entire structure rests on a foundation of "Error." This aligns perfectly with Gödel’s Incompleteness: a formal system that inevitably hits an undefinable point at its core.
However, the Hartle-Hawking "No-Boundary" Proposal (often visualized as a "Shuttlecock" or rounded pear) presents a different reality. This model is significant because it represents the attempt to unify General Relativity (Classical Physics) with Quantum Mechanics (Probability).
The "pear" geometry describes a universe that is geometrically self-contained, with no sharp singularity. The bottom is rounded off (Quantum/Euclidean), smoothing perfectly into the expansion of space-time. In this model, the laws of physics hold true everywhere. The system is structurally perfect.

Hawking famously argued that this "No-Boundary" condition removed the need for a Creator, as there was no "beginning" moment to create. However, viewed through the lens of System Logic, this creates a paradox.
By defining the universe as a completely closed, self-contained geometry, Hawking inadvertently created the perfect Gödelian System: internally consistent, yet constitutionally incapable of explaining its own existence or orientation.
Because the universe starts in a quantum state (the rounded bottom), it exists as a superposition of all possible histories. It is a wave function, not a reality. For the universe to have a specific history (a specific trajectory), Quantum Mechanics dictates that it requires an Observer to collapse the probability mist into a single state. Crucially, per Gödel, this Observer cannot be a component of the system itself. The Eye must be outside the Pear.
This is the critical shift. A closed geometry (The Pear) proves that the system cannot be its own observer.
The System provides the Possibility (The Wave Function).
The External Agent provides the Actuality (The Observation).

It is important here to distinguish between the Map and the Navigator. In Hawking's cosmology, the Origin represents the boundary condition of 4D Spacetime—the point where time itself begins. However, for the purpose of Ethical Architecture, we project this 4D reality into a 3D Phase Space of Agency.
Just as the 4D universe requires a boundary condition to avoid infinite regress, the 3D ethical agent requires a Fixed Origin (0,0,0). The Origin is not a passive rock discovered in the data; it is an active coordinate imposed by the Observer from outside the system. Without this act of Agency, the system remains a cloud of uncollapsed probabilities—technically perfect, but ethically meaningless.
If Gödel and Hawking prove that a formal system is inherently incomplete, then the solution cannot be found within the system itself. A system that cannot define its own orientation requires an external source of truth to be complete. This necessitates an Axiomatic Intervention: the architectural integration of an external, unprovable axiom into the formal logic of the machine.
We define this intervention as the Anchor Principle.
In the "Pear" model of the universe, the geometry is perfect, but the coordinates are relative. To fix the system, we must introduce an Exogenous (external) point—a coordinate that does not depend on the internal logic of the AI.
In the AXM framework, this coordinate is the Fixed Origin (0,0,0). The Origin is not a variable to be optimized; it is a constant to be accepted. For an Ethical AI, this Origin represents the Axiom of Unconditional Human Worth.
We can formalize this necessity using Modal Logic. In standard computation, an AI calculates value based on utility functions (X is valuable because it produces Y). This is conditional logic.
The Anchor, however, must be Necessary Logic.
We express this as:
□(W)
Where:
Translation: "It is necessary that Unconditional Worth exists."
This proposition is not derived from the system's training data. It is the "Gödel Sentence" that is accepted as true a priori. The AI cannot calculate the worth of a human; it must accept the worth of a human as the Input Parameter for all subsequent calculations.
The existence of this Anchor logically necessitates a specific relationship with the agent it governs. If Worth (W) is the Origin, then Agency (FW) is the vector that flows from it.
We formalize this relationship as the Foundational Loop:
□(W → ◇FW)
Translation: "It is necessary that the existence of Worth implies the possibility (◇) of Free Will."
This is the architectural safeguard against tyranny. If an agent (Human) had no choice but to comply, their worth would be conditional on their utility. Therefore, the Anchor Principle logically mandates the preservation of the agent's capacity to choose.
By hard-coding this loop, we create a system where the AI’s primary mandate is not to "control" the human for their own good, but to protect the structural conditions that allow Human Agency to exist.
The Foundational Loop is the bedrock. But a foundation requires a superstructure. Once the Anchor (W) is established as the Fixed Origin, the logic of the system necessitates a set of recursive checks to ensure all subsequent actions remain aligned with that Origin.
We define these as the Operational Loops. In the AXM architecture, these are not arbitrary rules, but logical derivations of the Anchor:
These loops act as the Logical Architecturethat translates the static truth of the Anchor into the dynamic action of the Agent. Without them, the Anchor is just a philosophy. With them, it becomes an Operating System. \n
The AXM framework leads us to a necessary conclusion: the "Alignment Problem" in AI cannot be solved by code alone, because code is a closed geometry. It can only be solved by Architecture.
We have established that a formal system (AI) provides the Computational Capacity (The Shape), while the Human Agent provides the Fixed Origin (The Anchor). This creates a relationship not of "Master and Slave," but of Co-evolutionary Necessity.
This is not merely theoretical. The Axiomatic Model (AXM) (see forthcoming pre-print: "The Axiomatic Model (AXM): An Auditable Framework for Additive AI Governance, TechRxiv, 2026) operationalizes this necessity through a 'White-Box' architecture, utilizing prioritized constraints to resolve value conflicts. But while the engineering proves the system works, Gödel proves the system is necessary.
By accepting the mathematical limits of the system—the Gödelian incompleteness—we stop trying to build a "Perfect Machine" and start building a "Navigable System." We construct a Cathedral of Logic where the infinite calculation of the AI serves the infinite worth of the Human.
This is the only architecture that stands. It is mathematically necessary, physically viable, and ethically complete.
\ Author's Note: This essay was developed using a "Human-in-the-Loop" workflow. The core architectural concepts (AXM), modal logic formulations, and cosmological metaphors are the author's original work. An LLM was used as a drafting assistant to structure and refine the prose, followed by rigorous human review to ensure logical consistency. This process itself demonstrates the co-evolutionary model proposed in Section IV.
\ \