TA14 was established to address a fundamental gap in modern systems:
Execution is widely implemented.
Validation is rarely enforced.
Most systems are designed to act.
Very few are designed to determine whether action itself is valid at the moment it occurs.
TA14 defines a deterministic standard for execution based on a single governing condition:
Execution is only valid if it can be derived from admissible, continuous record at commit time.
Not before.
Not approximately.
At the moment of action.
This framework introduces a constrained execution model built on three core architectural layers:
ASC — Admissible State Continuity
ACE — Admissible Commit Enforcement
AEA — Admissible Execution Architecture
Together, these layers establish a system in which execution is not assumed to be valid—it must be proven.
TA14 originates from the development of:
AIR — Atmospheric Integrity Record
PAIR — Personal Atmospheric Integrity Record
Environmental Integrity Governance (EIG)
These systems establish append-only, continuous records of environmental exposure and human physiological response, preserving observed reality without reconstruction or imputation.
TA14 extends these principles beyond observation into enforcement.
It defines the conditions under which systems are permitted to act, based strictly on admissible state at commit.
The governing structure of TA14 is unidirectional:
Admissible Record → Admissible Execution
Execution does not define validity.
Admissibility defines execution.
TA14 is not a collaborative framework.
It is a defined standard.
All evaluation, implementation, and alignment are required to conform to its core admissibility structure.
Execution without admissibility is not valid.
TA14 exists to enforce that boundary.
Origin and authorship
TA14 — Admissible Execution Standard
Established by Greggory Don Butler