Records may not be detached from law.
Purpose
This principle prevents documents from being treated as independent objects separate from the legal relationships that give them meaning.
Principle
Records may not be detached from law.
Meaning
A record exists within ayaawx. It gains relevance through connection to responsibility, authority, context, and witnessed practice.
Separated from those, it becomes information, not law.
What Detachment Looks Like
- Quoting without recognizing source authority.
- Applying statements outside their lawful setting.
- Treating documents as self-executing.
- Ignoring the roles required for interpretation.
Why This Matters
- Keeps governance relational.
- Prevents drift toward technical rule by text alone.
- Protects continuity of inherited responsibility.
- Ensures accountability remains visible.
Law Travels With Relationship
Where responsibility goes, meaning follows. Records cannot travel alone.
Examples
- A copied passage may inform but still require consultation.
- A historic document may guide but cannot command by itself.
- A policy file may exist without possessing authority.
If Detachment Occurs
Reliance on the record weakens. Further interpretation must return to lawful structures.
Risks if Ignored
- Paper replaces people.
- Authority shifts toward administrators.
- Misuse becomes easier.
- Trust declines.
Safeguards
- Keep references to lawful holders visible.
- Attach context and scope.
- Teach difference between storage and authority.
- Encourage direct engagement with responsible bodies.
Cross-references
- Records Do Not Override Ayaawx
- Recording Does Not Transfer Interpretive Authority
- Interpretation Remains with Lawful Structures
- Context Determines Lawful Use
- No Single Format Is Authoritative on Its Own
Notes
Future development may describe how records should accompany referrals to lawful interpreters.