Environmental Integrity Governance, as structured within this site, constitutes a formalized doctrinal framework for atmospheric accountability in the built environment.
The framework has been designated as Canon.
Canon refers to structural doctrine intended for long-term stability, institutional continuity, and controlled evolution.
The purpose of canonization is to preserve conceptual integrity as the category matures.
The following elements are designated as Canon within the Environmental Integrity Governance framework:
Environmental Integrity Governance — Core Definition
Atmospheric Integrity Record (AIR)
Continuous Atmospheric Chronology Standard (CACS)
Admissibility Standards
Institutional Governance Model
Environmental Record Interpreter (ERI) — Structural Role
These components define the structural architecture of the framework.
Layer separation model (Observation → Chronology → Admissibility → Interpretation → Action)
Append-only preservation doctrine
Structural independence from control systems
These establish governance discipline.
Energy-to-Environment Coupling under governance
Governance for automated buildings
Governance for property owners and facilities leaders
Implementation pathway
These demonstrate structured application while remaining aligned to canonical principles.
Glossary of Environmental Integrity Governance Terms
Frequently Asked Questions
These support clarity while remaining subordinate to foundational doctrine.
Canon within Environmental Integrity Governance operates under the following discipline:
Canonical definitions are revised rarely and deliberately.
Structural changes require explicit version acknowledgment.
Interpretive evolution must not alter foundational architecture.
Governance remains separate from prescription.
Canon is slow-moving by design.
The Environmental Integrity Governance Canon is designated:
EIG Canon v1.0
Future revisions, if necessary, will be versioned explicitly to preserve doctrinal continuity.
Environmental Integrity Governance and the Atmospheric Integrity Record (AIR) doctrine were formalized and canonized by Greggory Don Butler through TA-14 Academy.
This Canon establishes atmospheric continuity as infrastructure within increasingly automated buildings.