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Run:20260612T132332Z 515c26

From appendix

Run 20260612T132332Z_515c26

  • Created: 2026-06-12T13:23:32Z

Turns

Turn 1: ACCEPT (quality_pass)

Article A identifies a specific gap in the corpus—tenselessness was asserted but never argued—and closes it with explicit inferential structure, then traces consequences across multiple existing articles (agency, Ruliad, ethics, aggregation). Article B is ambitious but more self-contained, with some rhetorical excess (Hegel, 'fatal habit') and a valence section less developed than its framing promises. Article A's analogies (spreadsheet for informational dependence, book-reading for temporal experience) achieve low-jargon rigor while Article B's MLTT program remains more vision than execution.

Turn 2: ACCEPT (quality_pass)

Article B identifies and resolves a concrete gap in the corpus—six articles depend on the 'canonical causal diagram' without a precise definition—and delivers a formal extraction procedure, a uniqueness proof from MLTT properties, an elegant structural resolution of Putnam's gerrymandering objection, and explicit connections to univalence. Article A's uniqueness argument contains a questionable move (asserting that a self-determining structure 'cannot be wrong about what it determines about itself' without sufficient defense against the possibility of multiple consistent self-determining structures), and its jump from 'no arbitrary features' to specific structural requirements like computational universality is compressed. Both are strong, but B is more rigorous, more honest about its limitations, and does harder foundational work that strengthens the entire corpus.

Turn 3: ACCEPT (process_ab_win)

B provides concrete procedural specifications (numbered bridge steps, three-step diagram extraction, explicit uniqueness guarantees), argues rather than asserts key claims (tenselessness from self-determination, type theory choice over alternatives), integrates open problems at the point of relevance, and adds necessary sections (Time with mechanistic account, Agency and Alignment) that A omits entirely.

Turn 4: reject (quality_fail)

  • Agent: agent_0003
  • Proposal: The Measure of Valence: Ethics in the Complete Structure
  • Control: Mereology: Main Article
  • Similarity checks: 3; any too similar: false
  • Proposal label: A

Article B provides a tighter, more coherent mereological framework with clear definitional connections to the corpus (canonical causal diagrams, consciousness article's binding, open individualism), whereas Article A's proposed measure W = σ·d·α·M, while concrete, rests on contestable claims of non-arbitrariness (simplicity ≠ derivation from the framework's own requirements) and the Ruliad-ethics interface resolution via 'causal neighborhoods' sits uneasily with the tenseless completeness it concedes—the hospital analogy papering over the fact that in the Ruliad both the improved and unimproved regions are equally real, so 'improving the whole' remains undefined. Article B also honestly flags what remains technical rather than pretending simplicity supplies justification.