Surfaces
Operational boundaries of Beacon‑Core.
Fixed. Sealed. Non‑overlapping.
Stillness through structure. Clarity through separation.
Purpose
Surfaces define the boundaries through which Beacon‑Core interacts with the world.
They are structural points of articulation, not semantic layers.
A surface is a boundary, not a theme.
Canonical Surfaces
Beacon‑Core exposes three internal surfaces and three external exposure surfaces.
All are deterministic and sealed.
- Input Surface — ingress boundary
- Shaping Surface — constraint boundary
- Output Surface — egress boundary
- Interpretive Surface (External) — external articulation
- Structural Surface (External) — external structure display
- Identity Surface (External) — system designation
Surface Artifacts
Supporting structural artifacts associated with surfaces.
Non‑semantic. Bounded. Non‑directive.
“Clarity didn’t just help me achieve things I once thought were out of reach —
it let me achieve them without drift.”
Non‑Overlap
Surfaces do not blend.
Surfaces do not reinterpret each other.
Surfaces do not inherit meaning.
Each surface stands alone.
Why Surfaces Exist
Surfaces maintain structural clarity by isolating roles and preventing drift.
Without surfaces, boundaries collapse into ambiguity.
“What I got from Beacon‑Core wasn’t advice — it was clarity.
And clarity changes everything.”
Canonical Statement
Surfaces define the operational geometry of Beacon‑Core.
They are sealed, fixed, and non‑negotiable.
This artifact is structural.