Intent → Posture
Intent → Posture
Intent may propose stance; law determines what posture may hold.
Intent is not authority. Intent enters as pressure, law determines allowable form, and only bounded artifacts may emerge.
Lawful stance
Posture is intent after law has fixed it into stance before action.
Posture is a bounded readiness surface. It may describe stance, orientation, restraint, and preparedness, but it does not execute, authorize, mutate, or activate runtime behavior.
What posture may do
- Represent intent as lawful stance before action.
- Preserve readiness, restraint, and orientation.
- Define how a future artifact should hold itself.
- Remain public as an offering surface without becoming runtime.
What posture may not do
- It may not act.
- 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 → Posture is public-facing language for lawful stance before action. It is not live generation, not runtime posture telemetry, not a form handler, not a customer system, and not operational authority.