Spirit ID™ Module
Spirit ID Proof™
Spirit ID Proof™ defines what “proof-grade” means within the Spirit ID system. It is not about absolute certainty, but about method-based thresholds: consistency, observability, verifiability and triangulation.
1) Purpose of Spirit ID Proof™
Spirit ID Proof™ establishes a clear and transparent standard for evaluating evidence within the Spirit ID framework. It defines criteria, procedures and thresholds necessary before a case
can be assessed as “proof‑grade”.
2) The Four Proof‑Grade Pillars
- 1. Consistency:
internal signature stability across a defined corpus (tone, structure, lexicon). - 2. Observability:
responses or manifestations must be detectable (audio, physical response, PK thuds). - 3. Verifiability:
information, responses or patterns must be open to review and testing by others. - 4. Triangulation:
independent evidence lines (e.g., Spirit ID + PK Duality) pointing in the same direction.
3) When is a case “proof‑grade”?
A Spirit ID Case™ is considered “proof‑grade” when it meets the following
minimum conditions:
- (A) Internal signature:
clear linguistic consistency across multiple texts. - (B) External response:
PK‑based duality with predefined code (e.g., 1 thud = YES, 2 thuds = NO). - (C) Independent anchoring:
presence of a reference person or external observer (e.g., academic witness). - (D) Documented conditions:
clear protocol, date, procedure and setting. - (E) Transparency:
limitations must be stated; methods open for replication.
4) Proof‑Grade Workflow
Spirit ID Proof™ uses a simple, replicable workflow:
- Collect corpus:
texts, recordings, transcripts. - Run Spirit ID:
linguistic/structural signature analysis. - Apply Duality:
PK yes/no verification with predefined codes. - Cross‑compare:
see whether Spirit ID and PK confirm one another. - Document conditions:
date, format, witness, protocol. - Assign case status:
e.g., Pilot, Under Review, Proof‑Grade.
5) Limitations (important for credibility)
- Linguistic signature alone cannot decide identity.
- PK Duality requires predefined codes and controlled conditions.
- Witnesses and metadata strengthen a case, but do not guarantee identity.
- All cases remain open for reevaluation as more evidence becomes available.