TA-14 is not a collection of separate ideas.
It is a unified integrity governance architecture.
Each TA-14 domain addresses a different form of consequence, but all are governed by the same principle:
No action should become real unless the evidence supporting it is admissible, time-sequenced, non-reconstructed, and valid at the moment it binds.
TA-14 begins with reality.
It preserves reality as evidence.
It governs whether evidence is admissible.
It controls whether execution may occur.
It records the outcome in a way that remains inspectable across time.
TA-14 is organized around four core pillars.
Environmental Integrity Governance preserves the condition of physical environments as governed evidence.
It establishes the foundation for:
Atmospheric Integrity Records
Personal Atmospheric Integrity Records
building environmental history
HVAC and mechanical-system evidence
continuous commissioning integrity
environmental accountability
Its purpose is not to control buildings.
Its purpose is to preserve environmental reality before interpretation, optimization, or action.
Admissible Execution Integrity Governance defines when an action is allowed to become real.
Its technical core is Admissible Execution Architecture (AEA).
AEA governs:
evidence continuity
admissibility conditions
commit-time enforcement
non-bypassable execution boundaries
deterministic ALLOW / BLOCK / ESCALATE outcomes
This pillar answers the central TA-14 question:
Was the action admissible at the moment it became binding?
Financial Execution Integrity Governance applies TA-14 to financial systems.
It governs proof-bound financial execution where money, obligations, approvals, transactions, or institutional consequences may bind.
It requires that financial actions be supported by:
append-only integrity records
admissible evidence
Transition Objects
commit-time validation
non-bypassable enforcement boundaries
Its purpose is to prevent financial actions from executing on stale, reconstructed, unauthorized, or inadmissible conditions.
Insurance Execution Integrity Governance applies TA-14 to insurance consequence.
It governs:
claim approvals and denials
underwriting decisions
payout authorization
premium adjustment
fraud classification
reserve movement
cancellation and non-renewal
legal posture
regulatory response
adverse policyholder action
Its purpose is to ensure that no insurance action binds unless admissible evidence exists before and at the moment consequence becomes real.
Each TA-14 pillar addresses a different domain.
But the governing structure remains the same:
Reality → Record → Continuity → Admissibility → Commit Enforcement → Execution → Outcome
The domain may change.
The systems may change.
The consequences may change.
The integrity requirement does not.
Modern systems are increasingly automated, distributed, and consequential.
They can act faster than people can review.
They can produce outcomes across vendors, APIs, platforms, models, workflows, and institutions.
Without integrity governance, these systems can produce consequences that are difficult or impossible to prove valid after the fact.
TA-14 changes the question from:
“Can we explain what happened?”
to:
“Was this allowed to happen?”
Environmental Integrity Governance preserves evidence of reality.
Admissible Execution Integrity Governance determines whether action may bind.
Financial Execution Integrity Governance applies that discipline to financial consequence.
Insurance Execution Integrity Governance applies that discipline to policyholder, claims, and risk consequence.
Together, they form a single governance stack:
Evidence Integrity → Admissibility Integrity → Execution Integrity → Accountability Integrity
TA-14 is not:
a monitoring platform
an AI model
a control system
a claims system
a payment system
an optimization tool
a replacement for professionals or regulators
TA-14 is the governance layer that determines whether systems are permitted to produce consequence.
TA-14 exists to protect the boundary between information and consequence.
A system may observe.
A system may recommend.
A system may optimize.
A system may explain.
But no system should be allowed to bind consequence unless admissibility is proven at the moment of execution.
TA-14 unifies environmental integrity, admissible execution, financial execution, and insurance execution under one standard:
If it cannot be proven, it cannot be allowed.