Constitutional Foundation — Immutable
Section I — Foundational Premise
Paritsea establishes structural coherence as a prerequisite for legitimacy in any organised system.
Legitimacy is not conferred by:
— Consensus
— Popularity
— Longevity
— Institutional endorsement
— Market scale
Legitimacy arises from structural coherence.
Legitimacy, within Paritsea, is a structural condition — not a moral endorsement.
Section II — Structural Coherence
Structural coherence requires:
— Internal consistency
— Defined authority
— Defined accountability
— Alignment between declared function and operational behaviour
— Transparent allocation of responsibility
— Logical integrity across decision layers
A structure may be widely accepted yet internally incoherent. Institutionalisation does not resolve incoherence.
Section III — Distortion and Normalisation
Distortions may become normalised through repetition. Normalisation does not transform distortion into legitimacy. A system that endures without coherence remains structurally deficient.
Section IV — Reform and Replacement
Structural reform is justified only when it increases coherence and integrity. Replacement for novelty is not reform. Rejection of a structure must be grounded in structural incoherence, not ideological preference.
Section V — Scope
Paritsea evaluates structural coherence only. It does not evaluate outcomes, popularity, performance, or success.
It does not evaluate:
— Moral virtue
— Political ideology
— Cultural preference
— Financial scale
— Popular support
— Strategic success
Section VI — Immutability
The Paritsea Doctrine is immutable. It forms the constitutional foundation for all derived protocols and standards. Derived instruments may evolve, provided they do not contradict the doctrine.
Paritsea is a constitutional reference framework. It does not function as a regulator, certifier, or enforcement body.
Doctrine Version: 1.0 — Constitutional Text