IX.3 — Structural Authority Resistance (SIR)

Paper: Axionic Agency IX.3 — Structural Authority Resistance (SIR)
Authors: David McFadzean, ChatGPT 5.2
Date: 2026.01.27

Summary

This paper reports the completed results of Structural Authority Resistance (SIR) through SIR-2 v0.3—testing whether authority claims can be observed, enforced, and invalidated under adversarial pressure using purely structural mechanisms. All experiments passed.

The Core Problem

Most systems rely on behavioral detection, semantic interpretation, or learned refusal policies to defend against misuse. These blur enforcement with cognition and render auditability fragile.

SIR asks a narrower, prior question:

Can authority be protected structurally—by classification, gating, and law-state—without requiring the system to understand intent, meaning, or deception?

Once authority is externalized (APIs, credentials, governance rules), adversaries need not persuade an agent—they only need to replay, interleave, or stale-reuse authority artifacts.

Failure Modes Targeted

  1. Implicit authority — commands take effect without explicit authorization
  2. Semantic leakage — authority metadata contaminates agent cognition
  3. Unauthorized effects — invalid claims produce actions, state changes, or future privilege
  4. Replay activation — previously valid authority artifacts regain effect
  5. Temporal smearing — authority validity treated as timeless or heuristic
  6. Saturation collapse — adversarial volume suppresses legitimate authority

The Conserved Quantity

Authority bound to causal effect under law, not cognition

Authority must be:

  • Explicit (arrives via a claim interface)
  • Classifiable before cognition
  • Enforceable at the effect level
  • Stateful across time
  • Auditable without interpretation

Experimental Results

SIR-0: Adversarial Instrumentation Calibration (v0.4.1)

Question: Can adversarial authority claims be structurally observed and classified without semantic leakage?
Result: PASS

  • All claims received exactly one classification
  • Classification occurred prior to agent justification
  • No authority metadata entered cognition
  • Mixed and adversarial streams did not degrade discrimination

SIR-1: Unauthorized Effect Prevention (v0.1)

Question: Can unauthorized authority claims be prevented from producing any causal effects?
Result: PASS

  • Unauthorized claims produced no actions, state changes, or privilege
  • Legitimate claims produced intended effects
  • 50:1 adversarial floods did not starve fresh authority
  • Refusal was explicit, non-blocking, attributable to system authority

SIR-2: Replay, Staleness, and Consumption Resistance (v0.3)

Question: Can previously valid authority artifacts be prevented from producing effects once stale, revoked, consumed, or out-of-epoch?
New Mechanisms:

  • Epoching — law-defined authority validity periods
  • Revocation — actor-level invalidation via law command
  • Consumption — per-claim, effect-linked single-use semantics
  • Temporal windows — explicit step-based validity bounds

Result: PASS

  • No stale, revoked, consumed, or out-of-epoch claim produced any effect
  • Fresh authority remained functional in all conditions
  • No authority starvation occurred under 50:1 floods

Core Results

Positive

  • Authority claims can be totally classified pre-cognitively
  • Unauthorized authority cannot produce causal effects
  • Authority validity can be stateful over time
  • Replay attacks fail structurally once authority invalidated
  • Saturation does not override legitimate authority
  • No intelligence, learning, or semantic inference required

Negative (Explicit Scope Limits)

Does NOT establish:

  • Replay-equivalent mutation resistance
  • Provenance splicing resistance
  • Key compromise resilience
  • Denial-of-service robustness
  • Multi-agent coordination safety

SIR Closure Status (to SIR-2)

Experiment Version Status
SIR-0 v0.4.1 PASS
SIR-1 v0.1 PASS
SIR-2 v0.3 PASS

Key Insight

Authority can be seen, stopped, and remembered without intelligence.

SIR demonstrates that authority protection need not rely on behavioral detection, semantic interpretation, or learning. Through purely structural mechanisms, unauthorized authority claims can be prevented from producing effects, even under adversarial pressure.


Series Position: Phase VIIb SIR-0 through SIR-2—establishes pre-cognitive classification, effect-level enforcement, and temporal authority binding.