Entries must reflect witnessed understanding.
Entries Must Reflect Witnessed Understanding Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working
Purpose
This principle ensures that material recorded in the Codex corresponds to law as it has been acknowledged in community life.
General Principle
Entries must reflect witnessed understanding.
Meaning
Law gains clarity and force when it is observed, affirmed, and remembered by others. The Codex should therefore record principles and interpretations that have been publicly recognized rather than privately asserted.
Witnessing connects knowledge to responsibility.
Implications
Statements lacking witnessed basis should be identified as tentative, interpretive, or under discussion. Certainty should not be claimed where recognition has not occurred.
The Codex must remain honest about levels of agreement.
Relationship to Authority
Those who witness participate in preserving legitimacy. Their presence links the record to lived governance rather than individual claim.
Limits
Documentation alone cannot substitute for witnessing. Unconfirmed entries risk misunderstanding and dispute.
Continuity
By anchoring records in witnessed understanding, the Codex allows future generations to trace how law was known, not merely how it was written.