The Codex is not a constitution or statute book

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The Codex Is Not a Constitution or Statute Book Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working

Principle

The Codex is not a constitution or statute book.

Meaning

A codex is a **record, compilation, or book of texts** — historically a bound manuscript — but it does not by itself function as a **constitution or statute book** with coercive force or legal supremacy in the way state law does. In legal traditions, codification refers to collecting laws into a structured text, yet even there the text only gains authoritative power through recognized legal authority, enforcement, and context. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

Function

The Codex preserves teachings, relationships, responsibilities, and guiding principles. It supports transmission and reference, not rigid enforcement like a state constitution or statute book.

Requirements

Use of the Codex depends on **interpretation within lawful practice and relational authority**, not simply on its written form. Continuity and force come from lived practice and lawful recognition, not from textual status alone.

Limits

The Codex does not assume the **supreme legal authority of a state constitution** or the legislative force of statutory law. Its authority arises from communal recognition, lawful practice, and relational context — not from statutory power. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Implications

Recognizing the Codex as distinct from a statute book prevents misunderstanding its role: it is a reference grounded in relational practice, not a top-down legal text enforced by courts or states. Its strength lies in guiding conduct through shared understanding and responsibility.

Cross References