Intent → Glyph
Intent → Glyph
Intent may propose form; law determines what may become real.
Intent is not authority. Intent enters as pressure, law determines allowable form, and only bounded artifacts may emerge.
Compressed lawful form
A glyph is intent after law has shaped it into symbol.
A glyph is a bounded visual encoding of intent. It may carry meaning, posture, and symbolic compression, but it does not execute, authorize, generate, mutate, or activate runtime behavior.
What the glyph may do
- Represent lawful intent as compressed symbol.
- Preserve boundary, posture, and meaning.
- Provide a visual surface for future governed artifacts.
- Remain public as an offering surface without becoming runtime.
What the glyph may not do
- It may not execute.
- It may not grant authority.
- It may not create customer records.
- It may not process payment.
- It may not activate workspace, VIP, Security, Verity, or runtime behavior.
Public offering boundary
Intent → Glyph is public-facing language for a governed artifact path. It is not live generation, not a form handler, not a customer system, and not operational authority.