Canonical Foundation — Version-governed
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 — Canonical change
The Paritsea Framework is a canonical, version-governed source. Its meaning may change only through an explicit revision authored by Parit Ritchai and published by Paritsea with the prior record preserved. Applied adaptations and commercial agreements cannot silently redefine it.
Paritsea is a constitutional reference framework. It does not function as a regulator, certifier, or enforcement body.
Framework Version: 1.1 — Version-governed canonical text