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Definition

Interpretive evidence

Interpretive evidence defines a canonical concept for AI interpretation, authority, evidence and response legitimacy.

CollectionDefinition
TypeDefinition
Version1.0
Stabilization2026-04-09
Published2026-04-09
Updated2026-05-07

Evidence layer

Probative surfaces brought into scope by this page

This page does more than point to governance files. It is also anchored to surfaces that make observation, traceability, fidelity, and audit more reconstructible. Their order below makes the minimal evidence chain explicit.

  1. 01
    Canon and scopeDefinitions canon
  2. 02
    Response authorizationQ-Layer: response legitimacy
  3. 03
    Weak observationQ-Ledger
  4. 04
Canonical foundation#01

Definitions canon

/canon.md

Opposable base for identity, scope, roles, and negations that must survive synthesis.

Makes provable
The reference corpus against which fidelity can be evaluated.
Does not prove
Neither that a system already consults it nor that an observed response stays faithful to it.
Use when
Before any observation, test, audit, or correction.
Legitimacy layer#02

Q-Layer: response legitimacy

/response-legitimacy.md

Surface that explains when to answer, when to suspend, and when to switch to legitimate non-response.

Makes provable
The legitimacy regime to apply before treating an output as receivable.
Does not prove
Neither that a given response actually followed this regime nor that an agent applied it at runtime.
Use when
When a page deals with authority, non-response, execution, or restraint.
Observation ledger#03

Q-Ledger

/.well-known/q-ledger.json

Public ledger of inferred sessions that makes some observed consultations and sequences visible.

Makes provable
That a behavior was observed as weak, dated, contextualized trace evidence.
Does not prove
Neither actor identity, system obedience, nor strong proof of activation.
Use when
When it is necessary to distinguish descriptive observation from strong attestation.
Attestation protocol#04

Q-Attest protocol

/.well-known/q-attest-protocol.md

Optional specification that cleanly separates inferred sessions from validated attestations.

Makes provable
The minimal frame required to elevate an observation toward a verifiable attestation.
Does not prove
Neither that an attestation endpoint exists nor that an attestation has already been received.
Use when
When a page deals with strong proof, operational validation, or separation between evidence levels.
Complementary probative surfaces (1)

These artifacts extend the main chain. They help qualify an audit, an evidence level, a citation, or a version trajectory.

Report schemaAudit report

IIP report schema

/iip-report.schema.json

Public interface for an interpretation integrity report: scope, metrics, and drift taxonomy.

Interpretive evidence

Interpretive evidence is treated here as a bridge term for the broader evidence family that makes an interpretation, synthesis, classification, or recommendation contestable.

It is useful because many teams already feel that they need “evidence” about how meaning was formed, bounded, or shifted. On this site, however, the term remains broader than proof of fidelity and more general than interpretation trace.


Operational definition

Interpretive evidence is any evidence that helps establish how a meaning-bearing output was produced, bounded, compared, versioned, or challenged.

It may concern:

  • the canonical source base;
  • the response conditions under which an answer was authorized;
  • the observed output set and its context window;
  • the trace linking a claim to a source hierarchy;
  • the dated comparison between states, systems, or releases.

In other words, interpretive evidence concerns the governability of meaning, not merely the presence of a citation.


What counts as interpretive evidence

The term can legitimately cover several families of artefacts:

This is why the evidence layer matters so much: it aligns these objects instead of letting them float as disconnected proof fragments.


What this term does not prove by itself

Used alone, the term remains too broad.

It does not prove by itself that:

  • the output stayed inside the canon;
  • the preserved meaning remained legitimate under scope and negation;
  • the evidence package is sufficient for a third party to reconstruct the case;
  • the observed state is strong enough to become opposable.

An output may therefore be surrounded by interpretive evidence and still fail to establish proof of fidelity.


Relation to proof of fidelity

On this site, the distinction is simple:

  • interpretive evidence is the broader evidentiary family;
  • proof of fidelity is the stricter threshold required to show that an output remained inside the canon.

Interpretive evidence may support investigation, explanation, comparison, or challenge. Proof of fidelity supports a stronger claim: that the output remained canonically bounded under declared conditions.

For the full distinction, see Interpretive evidence vs proof of fidelity.


Relation to reconstructable evidence

Reconstructable evidence designates a stricter subset: evidence packaged well enough that a third party can reconstruct the path, the scope, the version, and the comparison regime.

So the hierarchy used here is:

  • interpretive evidence: broad evidentiary family;
  • reconstructable evidence: packaged enough for third-party reconstruction;
  • proof of fidelity: strong enough to support a bounded fidelity claim.

Why this page exists

The expression “interpretive evidence” is readable, useful, and increasingly likely to circulate. This page captures it early, while preserving the site’s stricter doctrinal hierarchy.

Here, interpretive evidence is accepted as entry vocabulary, but it never replaces proof, canon, or response legitimacy.

Operational labels that depend on this evidence family

This evidence family now directly supports several captured service-facing labels:

These labels only remain serious if the interpretive evidence can later be challenged, replayed, and compared.

Phase 3 adjacency: evidence, auditability, and measurement

This definition now belongs to the phase 3 evidence-control layer. Its role is clarified by four canonical surfaces: evidence layer, interpretive auditability, Q-Ledger, and Q-Metrics.

The operational sequence is: interpretive evidence identifies what can support challenge, reconstructable evidence packages the case for third-party review, interpretation trace exposes the path, canon-output gap measures the distance from canon, proof of fidelity tests whether the output remained bounded, and interpretive observability monitors variation over time.

In this layer, interpretive evidence should not be read as a loose evidence word. It is part of a chain that separates observation, measurement, reconstructability, auditability, and proof.

Phase 10 inference-control adjacency

This definition now routes adjacent inference-control questions toward interpretive error space, free inference, default inference, arbitration, indeterminacy, and interpretive fidelity.

This adjacency matters because a system can produce a fluent answer while silently filling gaps, selecting the wrong authority, hiding indeterminacy, or losing fidelity to the canon. The phase 10 layer makes those failure paths explicit.

Phase 11 adjacency: opposability, enforceability, and procedural reliance

This definition is now connected to the phase 11 institutional-reception layer: opposability, enforceability, commitment boundary, liability reduction, contestability, procedural validity, responsibility chain, and remedy path.

The practical consequence is that a response should not be trusted merely because it is accurate, retrieved, cited, fluent or useful. If the receiving environment can treat it as consequential, the output must remain challengeable, procedurally valid, responsibly allocated, correctable and bounded by the right commitment boundary.