Balance as the Measure of Resolution
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Balance as the Measure of Resolution
Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working
Purpose
This entry records the principle that balance is the measure of resolution. A matter is not resolved by decision, agreement, or declaration alone, but by the restoration and maintenance of balance within relationships and the Nation.
General Principle
- Balance is the measure of resolution.
- Resolution is confirmed through restored balance.
- Decisions alone do not constitute resolution.
- Imbalance indicates incomplete resolution.
Understanding Balance
- Balance exists among people, houses, clans, land, and relationships.
- Balance includes social, cultural, spiritual, and material dimensions.
- Balance is relational and collective, not abstract.
- Balance may take time to be restored.
Resolution
- Resolution seeks restoration, not victory.
- Resolution is assessed through ongoing conduct.
- Resolution is validated through witnessed repair.
- Resolution is sustained through public memory.
Assessment
- Continued harm signals unresolved imbalance.
- Restored trust indicates resolution.
- Repeated disruption suggests failed or incomplete process.
- Balance must endure beyond the moment of settlement.
Limits
- Balance does not require equal outcomes.
- Balance does not erase responsibility.
- Balance cannot be declared unilaterally.
- Balance cannot exist without acknowledgment and repair.